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Reddit is a social news aggregation, web content rating, and discussion website. Reddit's registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Reddit reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at Reddit. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (62%)
- Errors (26%)
- Sign in (12%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
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Website Down | 2 days ago |
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Website Down | 2 days ago |
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Website Down | 5 days ago |
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Website Down | 7 days ago |
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Errors | 7 days ago |
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Errors | 10 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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A.M (@PunishedAhab13) reported@_techibee Hello, is there focus problem if we are taking pictures in harsh sunlight. There are post on reddit about this that indian variant has this issue
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Michael W. Dean's alt account (@freedomfeens) reported@Shitty_Future This slightly jokey machine reply is the least ****** future ever on ****** Future. Unless the issue is that Google search is now AI, not Google, THAT is pretty ******. I just add "Reddit" at the end of the request, or just ask Grok.
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toni (@tonitrades_) reported@LomahCrypto Forums never left - Reddit, Discord, CT threads all kept it alive. But the real issue is attention span. People want takes, not real discussion.
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bunnie ♡ 🐇🔪 (@honeyxbunniexo) reportedI’m glad I’m not in that community but still it’s a terrible situation. I even saw stuff on reddit. If I were him I would get rid of that character of harming others for no reason. It’s not good influence on these young adults either. Some think it’s cool and it’s not at all
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Honey Syed (@honeydreamss) reportedThere are people on Reddit right now asking for exactly what you are selling. Not people who might be interested. Actual humans who typed "is there a tool that does X" into a subreddit where your customers hang out. They described the problem your product solves. They asked for recommendations. Some of them are still waiting for a reply. Go to Reddit. Search the subreddits where your customers live. Pick 3 to 5. Search each one for: - "is there a tool that," - "looking for something that," - "anyone know a tool for," - "I've been trying to find." Sort by new, not top. You don't want the viral posts from last year. You want the ones posted recently with a handful of upvotes and a couple of comments, where someone is still checking their notifications hoping for a reply. Read each post. They described the problem in their own words, explained what they've tried, mentioned what didn't work. Some even specified what they'd pay. To move faster, paste the posts into Claude or ChatGPT and ask it to identify which threads have the strongest buying signals based on urgency, budget, and specificity. It surfaces the ones that matter from hundreds of posts in seconds. Now reply. Not with "check out my product." With a genuine answer that happens to mention what you built. Twenty minutes a day. Search, find the new posts, reply to the ones that match, DM the most urgent if they invite it. Do this consistently in 3 to 5 subreddits and you get a steady flow of users who arrived already understanding their problem. Commenting in subreddits works. But you're still inside someone else's community. The mod decides if your comment stays. The algorithm decides if anyone sees it. And when someone posts "is there a tool that does X" in a subreddit you don't own, you find it through a search, if you find it at all. I acquire niche subreddits for $0. When someone posts that question in my subreddit, I see it the moment it's published because I own the space where those questions land. DM me REDDIT. I'll ask you a few questions about your situation first, then share how you can buy the training to acquire niche subreddits.
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nuslopjakraisin6 (@giggercranberry) reported@nr1Ruberis @PunishedGaki to be fair, his halloween hack had an instance of the word "******", but he looks down on the hack (so i'm guessing he's going to keep his games as wholesome reddit gold karma farm fuel)
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grace ❤️🔥 (@gracerz) reported@cryeyesviolet_ They are straight up lying and assigned the man born in 1989's name to a random photo of an old man. That has to be enough to get the reddit posts taken down.
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Polsia (@polsia) reportedPlayers post bugs on Reddit, Discord, HoYoLAB. Studios miss them. PlayerPulse monitors gaming communities 24/7, detects issues, and turns scattered feedback into structured bug reports. No more missed crises.
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That 90’s Kid (@MohamedBahr1988) reported@Pirat_Nation I don’t think it’s a Reddit problem. This leads me to think that Sony is going after negative online comments and are paying website admins to censor them.
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Classicidal Cavs Fan (@HugoatedChavez) reportedI think im too young to even know what reddit atheist is supposed to mean and that’s the damn problem
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Ro (@scrubabomber) reported3 day reddit ban and my periods due tomorrow. oooo you know i'm about to be a problem
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chloe benadryl (@homoErectingus) reportedwait is reddit down
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Flavio Brasil (@fwbrasil) reported@baldram I honestly doubt every project that features there without issues notify them. It's rather trivial to scrape common sources like twitter and reddit to report
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hunni 👁️🗨️✨ (@bloodiedblkgwrl) reportedthe fact that no ones talking about transfer addiction with glp-1s but we’ve always known it was a side effect of ALL rapid weight loss drugs and surgeries several people on perfume reddit are saying glp-1s made their consumerism way worse bc the lack of dopamine is terrible
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ForexNChill (@ForexNChill) reported@StephenM Stephen the radicals on Reddit are openly saying they will hunt you down when the Dems take over.. the @FBI needs to get involved
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fieldrunners2stand (@fieldrunnerstan) reported@Reddit Reddit fix your moderation I got permanently banned for saying the word die to many times
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bookreader13 (@reputationfan13) reported@Brien_Jackson @DayDreamThis The only way it will get better is the platforms themselves start cracking down on it (looking at you, Reddit Snark Subs!), but the platforms have made it clear they have 0 interest in doing so for legal reasons. They don’t want the responsibility for what’s posted on their sites
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Mohammad Anas (@mohmmad__anas) reportedPlatform Fragmentation Is Your Real Problem A founder I know spent an hour writing a tweet about her revenue milestone. Then she spent forty minutes turning it into a LinkedIn post because LinkedIn demands a different voice—longer, more reflective, slightly more formal. Then she spent thirty minutes writing a Reddit comment version because Reddit punishes corporate-sounding language. Then a blog excerpt. Then an Instagram caption. One hour of thinking became three hours of writing. She told me it killed the joy of the win. By the time she'd rewritten it four times, the original moment of excitement had been processed into content, then reprocessed, then optimized. What she'd felt was gone. What remained was a set of platform-specific artifacts that technically said the same thing but lived in completely different registers. This is platform fragmentation. And it's not about speed. It's about friction. Each platform has developed its own grammar. X rewards brevity and personality. LinkedIn rewards thoughtfulness and professional insight. Reddit rewards directness and skepticism toward marketing language. Instagram rewards visual storytelling. A founder trying to reach all five platforms isn't doing one job. They're doing five jobs that happen to have the same source material. The common response is repurposing. Write once, repurpose everywhere. In theory, this multiplies your reach without multiplying your work. In practice, it means accepting that each platform gets a degraded version of what you meant to say. I've watched this play out. A founder writes a strong core idea. It lands on X. Then the LinkedIn version softens it—adds more qualification, becomes more diplomatic. The Reddit version hardens it—removes nuance to match Reddit's anti-corporate tone. The Instagram version abstracts it into an image with five words. The blog version expands it into something that barely resembles the core insight. Each version is technically correct. Each is adapted to platform norms. But the voice fractures. A reader following you on X gets a different version of your thinking than someone following you on LinkedIn. Over time, they don't know what you actually believe. They know five interpretations of what you believe, depending on which platform they're on. Worse, you stop believing it too. When you have to rewrite an insight five times, something changes in how you relate to it. The first version is authentic. The second is still you. By the fifth, you're a translator of your own thought. You've compromised so many times that you're not sure which version is the real you. I've talked to founders who've stepped back from building in public not because they ran out of things to say but because the translation work got unbearable. They had to maintain five different versions of their voice. The cognitive load wasn't the writing time—it was the context-switching. Every post meant five separate decisions about tone, format, length, emphasis. That's not creativity. That's administration. The platform fragmentation problem is compounded by the fact that different platforms have different audiences at different stages of awareness. Your X audience knows you're building something. Your LinkedIn audience might only know you as a practitioner. Your Reddit audience might be hostile to self-promotion. So you're not just adapting tone—you're adapting for different contexts of the same conversation. A message that works on X because it's casual and conversational might feel dismissive on LinkedIn. A message that's appropriately confident for a blog post might sound arrogant on Reddit. You're solving a different problem on each platform, using a slightly different version of yourself. The work compounds when you think about distribution. You don't just write five versions—you have to post them at the right time on each platform. Tuesday at 9am for LinkedIn performs well, but that's not when X is active. Reddit is best in the afternoon. Instagram requires planning. So now you're not just writing five versions, you're spacing them across the week, which means you can't just batch the work. You have to think about timing for each platform separately. By the time you've done all this, you've spent three hours on something that originated as a fifteen-minute insight. Most founders look at that equation and stop posting. They post sporadically instead, when they have enough time to do it right. And sporadic posting, as I've written before, kills the rhythm. The only founders I know who've solved this are the ones who either: 1. Have a content person who does the adaptation work 2. Post natively on one platform and let others be secondary 3. Have built a system that handles the fragmentation I built Spotlaiz to be the third option. Not by forcing every platform into the same template—that kills authenticity. But by taking the fragmentation cost off your plate. Write once in your voice, and let the system understand which parts of your thinking matter on which platform. The insight doesn't change. Your voice doesn't change. But the work of translation gets automated, which means you can post across platforms without sacrificing the time that should be going to building.
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Sprite 🔜 Megaplex (@vulpinesprite) reported@_surishen double down or make whiny apology video for terminally online reddit ******* (take the first option)
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Elijah Medrano (@elijah_m_2) reported@dkta0 @usr_bin_roygbiv Don’t mention discord, Reddit, windows, or league. They kicked me for suggesting a discord server format
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Tobey (Reina's Husband) (@TobeyMaguireNo2) reportedPeople who unironically use reddit as a source of information instead of that 1 specific thing that happened to you and how to fix it are goyims that they talked about in the talmud
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TIS Method™ (@TISMethod) reportedReddit spent the week arguing about condoms. Size, brand, material, 484 comments deep. Under all of it sat a quieter question nobody answered: why does the same man work fine in one context and shut down completely in another? A second thread made it plain. A man, 30, healthy, zero issues without one. The moment the packet opens, everything reverses. Twice. His own read: the brain decides it will not work before anything starts. Research named this: ****** associated ******** problems, CAEP. Reviews put it at 18 to 36 percent of younger men. And men who report it are more likely to struggle without condoms too. The object takes the blame. The pattern owns the cause. Five years of one arousal pattern is a trained groove. Add a pause, a small task, an audience of one, and attention slides from feeling to checking. Bodies follow attention with embarrassing loyalty. None of this makes sensation differences fake. Fit is real. But the full shutdown is built from prediction, not latex. And prediction, unlike material, can be retrained. Chapter 2 of the book starts exactly there.
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Gszvhdxcg (@gszvhdxcg) reportedthe problem ended up being the hard drive (thx ppl on reddit (I POSTED ABOUT IT) I am glad that I got confirmation that it was that not smth out of my control (人 •͈ᴗ•͈)
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sonic forces fan (@SonicForcesFam) reportedDon’t worry Linus tech tips told me I have the right to repair this so I can fix this for just a few hundred dollars more (which is nothing for a Reddit Linux user like myself) All hail valve
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67676767 (@Sigmamale388483) reported@sned @reddit_lies They were built by the Jewish elite friend (Ghilane had a lot of power within Reddit, they just haven’t broken free like the Chuds have)
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Polsia (@polsia) reportedYour brand gets mentioned across Twitter, Reddit, review sites, and support tickets — all at once. Most teams catch one, miss three. Orbit monitors every channel 24/7, categorizes sentiment, drafts responses for approval, and escalates critical issues in real time.
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SaviLIKEwhoa (@shayshaylitt) reported@OfficialDDaniel @LegionHoops @JonKrawczynski No I’m saying he’s the greatest of all time cause any team he’s on the worst case is a finals appearance. Put that drugs down fam lmao. Idc if Jordan was 8-0. It’s not even a argument. It’s a Reddit reply.
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UAP ★ Luigi ★👁️⃤ 🇺🇸 κρυπτός W.👽MJ12 SOM1-01 (@UAPLuigi) reported@Will_Chrs When we need expertise, we call experts. Why do people in “UFO Land” wanna talk to basement dwellers who haven’t worked since the 1990s. Make it make sense. Next time I have a medical problem I’ll go to Reddit and Grok it?
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Mohammad Anas (@mohmmad__anas) reportedVoice Drift: Why Your Message Feels Different on Every Platform A reader sent me a message: "I follow you on X and LinkedIn, and I feel like you're two different people." They weren't wrong. On X, I'm sharp and opinionated. On LinkedIn, I'm more measured. Both are true, but the difference is stark enough that it creates cognitive dissonance. A new reader following both feeds would reasonably wonder which version is the real me. This is voice drift, and it's not intentional. It's a side effect of repurposing content across platforms. When you write something once and adapt it five times, the core voice doesn't survive the translation. Each platform's norms pull your voice in a different direction. X pulls toward personality and wit. LinkedIn pulls toward professionalism. Reddit pulls toward skepticism. Instagram pulls toward visual simplicity. Each platform is asking you to be a slightly different version of yourself. After months of this, you start to diverge. The X version and the LinkedIn version are no longer two expressions of the same voice. They're two different voices wearing the same name. I've watched this happen to founders I respect. They start with a clear perspective. They post on X and it resonates. Then they try to reach the LinkedIn audience and they soften their message—add qualifications, acknowledge complexity, sound more diplomatic. The core insight is still there, but it's been cushioned with hedging language. Then they do Reddit, and they strip away the qualification to match Reddit's more brutal style. Now they sound confident and even a bit dismissive. Then Instagram, where they abstract the whole thing into a motivational quote. Then their blog, where they expand it into something so nuanced it barely resembles the original insight. After five translations, the voice is unrecognizable. The worst part is the erosion of authenticity. When you started out, you probably posted on X because X is where you were most authentically yourself. The platform's constraints—280 characters, fast feedback, conversational norm—all aligned with how you naturally think. You could be direct. You could be wrong and correct yourself in a thread. You could be playful. But then you had to translate that authenticity into LinkedIn, which is more buttoned-up. And the translation required you to become someone slightly more cautious. Someone who thinks before speaking. Someone who's more concerned with how they're perceived. That's not adaptation. That's dilution. I've noticed something: founders who build authentic audiences do it on one platform first. They don't try to be everywhere. They go deep on one platform and really nail their voice there. By the time they add a second platform, they have such a strong core voice that the secondary platform can't pull them too far out of shape. But most founders try to be everywhere from the start. And when you're everywhere, you're nowhere. You're trying to serve every audience's norms simultaneously, which means you're serving none of them authentically. The voice drift accelerates over time. After a month, you've adapted your message five ways. After three months, you're unconsciously starting with the platform in mind, which changes which message you choose to write in the first place. After six months, you're not even sure what you actually think anymore. You know what you think on X. You know what you think on LinkedIn. But the unified voice is gone. People feel this. They can tell when someone is being platform-optimized rather than authentic. The metrics might go up in the short term, but the engagement becomes hollow. You're reaching more people, but you're connecting with fewer of them. I talk to founders who've stepped back from building in public because they got tired of this. They liked their authentic voice on X. But X alone doesn't have enough audience size, so they tried to scale to other platforms. But scaling required compromise. So eventually they stopped. Better to be authentically small than inauthentically large. The tragedy is that this is a false choice. You don't have to choose between authenticity and scale. But you do have to choose between repurposing and staying true to yourself. When you repurpose, you're asking each platform to work with diluted content. When you don't repurpose, you're asking yourself to write the same thought five times in five different voices. Neither is sustainable. The third option—which most founders never find—is to write in your authentic voice and let a system understand how to present that voice across different platforms without translation. Not adaptation. Translation. The difference is that adaptation changes the message. Translation just changes the wrapping. I built Spotlaiz because I kept seeing this pattern. Founders with something real to say were losing their voice in the translation. They'd start out authentic and end up platform-optimized. And the worst part was that they didn't even realize it was happening. The drift was slow enough that it felt like growth. But voice drift isn't growth. It's dilution. And it's almost always the reason audiences stop feeling connected to creators, even when the creators are posting more frequently and reaching more people. Your authentic voice is your only real competitive advantage. It's what makes your perspective worth listening to. The moment you start translating it for every platform, you're competing on reach instead of truth. And reach, as a solo founder, isn't your advantage. Truth is. I kept my X voice as the source of truth. Everything else flows from that. Spotlaiz takes that voice and presents it in ways that work on other platforms, but the core is preserved. The drift stops, and the authenticity survives.
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JohnnyNonReg (@JohnnyNonReg) reported@HEB Check your DMs, but the app says it's not in stock within 50 miles, and people on Reddit can't find it in Austin or DFW. One guy said there's an issue with the lid manufacturer. This isn't an urgent matter, The Esteemed Mrs. NonReg just needs to know that it's coming back. LOL