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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.

  • 63% Website Down (63%)
  • 25% Errors (25%)
  • 12% Sign in (12%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Indio Website Down 9 days ago
Rosenau Errors 9 days ago
Pélissanne Sign in 11 days ago
Adelaide Website Down 15 days ago
Brisbane Website Down 18 days ago
Bengaluru Website Down 19 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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Reddit Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • Other_Sheep_
    OtherSheep (@Other_Sheep_) reported

    @bartofthehouses @KelseaJ112 @LDS_RedPill You gave the reddit response “I’m so smart you don’t even know” And you also couldn’t even give one story for the Book of Mormon lol your “favorite” part is the last verse supposedly “because it’s finally over” and your least favorite was a broad critique of someone who hasn’t read it. So your reading comprehension is either TERRIBLE or you haven’t read it

  • CottageCrusader
    CottageCrusader✝️ (@CottageCrusader) reported

    Holy **** what a terrible resume for the most disgusting greasy Reddit *** I’ve ever seen

  • Mark7849011
    Game adventure and VR World (@Mark7849011) reported

    @Hakariperson Ghost face There a moment form one video IS a Charecter Glitch Went he pick up Up and stab for to hang The Game glitch He was Sent flying UP to sky and Stab That Survivor Repeats Over and over in sky in Physical gone Wild of Reddit XD I wish there was a Ghoul Gen kaneki

  • CrimsonSellec9
    Red&Wolf Fund Management Co (@CrimsonSellec9) reported

    Been telling the crackers that for the last wo)7 2 decades. But the crackers were like "Uh hyuck *Fixes reddit longhouse glass* do you ummm burn the whole house down just because cockroahces in it? Checkmate atheist". Idk can you? Lots of cracker golems with guns up there wo)7.

  • bxn45I
    𝑏 𝑥 𝑛 (@bxn45I) reported

    @Cynical_Waffles @Valiant_Hermes @iamrobtv I mean I’m pretty sure that’s not the case for everything, many games are click and play but there also many games where u gotta check reddit to solve problems, Space Marine 2 stuck in boot up screen, AC Shadows heavy stutters after 30 minutes of playing

  • Yippiekiyay6
    Yippiekiyay6 (@Yippiekiyay6) reported

    @eXverze @AGCast4 @Reiju_N1337 Also the cop wasnt doxxed other everyone involved would be in trouble. Publically admitting crimes is reddit behavior.

  • AlOmariInc
    Abdelrahman Al Omari (@AlOmariInc) reported

    the least impressive part of my product is the part that actually works. leadsynth doesn't blast messages from one central server. every reply goes out from the user's own account, their own session, at human pace — one at a time, across reddit/x/linkedin/youtube. blasting it all through a single API would've been 10x easier to build and demo. it also would've gotten every account flagged inside a week. so i ate the slow version. 686 accounts, each its own real session. 27,178 conversations sent. 0 spam complaints. the boring infra is the whole moat. the clever shortcut would've been dead on arrival. founders — what's the unglamorous decision in your stack that quietly holds the whole thing up?

  • AICommerceGuy_
    The Agentic Commerce Guy (@AICommerceGuy_) reported

    @harpreetchatha_ @kristakdoyle The contradiction in your last line is the whole problem in a sentence. Reddit marketing corrupts the authenticity that makes Reddit valuable, but AI weights Reddit so heavily that ignoring it costs you visibility. Brands are stuck choosing between staying pure and staying visible.

  • rahamanbinujit
    Rahaman Bin Ujit (@rahamanbinujit) reported

    @malgatyuvraj Reddit works when you post in a community where your exact problem already gets discussed. HN is good for technical products but brutal if you lead with a pitch. Show up with the value, mention what you built at the end.

  • chanchutoad
    Chan Chu (@chanchutoad) reported

    Whoever posted this on reddit needs to be put down

  • mauthe_doog
    Mauthe Doog 👁️ (@mauthe_doog) reported

    After I stopped laughing at the headline and read it, it sounds like they're just going to the mods of the horror short story forums and saying "give me the email of the most popular short story writers here" It's funny because as far as I'm aware, Kane didn't interact with the backrooms reddit and is actually quoted as saying he had "no idea" about the backrooms community when he started his series. It's kinda funny seeing it try to sneakily imply that the success of the backrooms is due to Reddit when you could remove it from the equation entirely and nothing would change. The article is TECHNICALLY not wrong about Reddit helping the communities grow, and says Reddit, Youtube, and Tiktok are where the communities grow. Which is not the full story: Reddit is the easiest to search historical opinions and has the horror short story community mostly now. Reddit functions as a kind of retention layer for long term discussion. A lot of that happens in discords but they're silo'd off so practically useless for any discussion like this. And yes I know "reddit haha" but the horror writers there are pretty good, so it's not the worst idea in the world. Although there are some big examples of tiktok native series doing well (Angel Engine), afaik short form is more used to share analog horror than make it. YouTube is where most of the horror growth is imo, especially for video since the horror analysis/commentary community pulls in MASSIVE numbers that (unfortunately only sometimes) filter down to original creators like Kane. Kane's work is great but I don't think it would be half as popular if other YouTube creators didn't latch onto it.

  • Fools_Edge
    Fool's Edge (@Fools_Edge) reported

    Great post. How I'm allocated is a barbell approach. On the 1 side, go long AI basket. Think semi, data center, memory. On the other side, go long solid names that's been beaten down due to AI/AI capex narrative. Think Amazon (capex fears), Reddit (brought down with software basket). Side note: Some AI names rn kinda reminds me of crypto companies in 2021, like mara, in terms of their runups. I got caught with my pants down in the 2022 dump on crypto publicly traded shitcos, valuable lesson for me. Not calling for a giant crash, I'm personally dancing while the music is playing by being allocated in AI theme during this boom. But realize it is fragile and things can change quick. Lots of leverage building atm, it'll unwind eventually and it'll get nasty. I can't time it though so just riding the wave for now and watching.

  • InklineO
    Inkline (@InklineO) reported

    I've watched founders pour six figures into redesigns... Thinking a slicker hero section would fix pipeline. It won't. The decision was made in a Slack channel, a peer call, a podcast, a Reddit thread. You weren't in the room.

  • coreyganim
    Corey Ganim (@coreyganim) reported

    the AI version of market research as a service: 1. pick a niche 2. collect where the market talks 3. use AI to find repeated pain 4. turn it into content/offers/scripts 5. sell the monthly update most businesses are NOT listening to their market. they (sometimes) check reviews. they (sometimes) skim comments. they (sometimes) ask customers. But nobody is systematically turning market language into business assets. 5 niches you could sell this to: 1. Dentists Sources: - Google reviews - Reddit threads - competitor websites - local Facebook groups - patient FAQs Build: "Patient Objection Miner" Output: - top fears - service questions - ad angles - landing page copy - content ideas 2. Gyms Sources: - member reviews - cancellation reasons - competitor offers - local fitness groups Build: "Churn + Offer Insight Report" Output: - why people join - why people quit - what offers pull attention - what testimonials to collect 3. Med spas Sources: - TikTok comments - Google reviews - competitor promos - consult questions Build: "Consult Question + Content Engine" Output: - FAQs - trust objections - offer angles - follow-up scripts 4. Ecommerce brands Sources: - Amazon reviews - competitor reviews - support tickets - ad comments Build: "Customer Voice Mining Skill" Output: - product issues - hooks - objections - comparison angles - new product ideas 5. Agencies Sources: - sales calls - lost-deal notes - client emails - industry posts Build: "Niche Demand Map" Output: - what buyers care about - what they ignore - what language they use - what offer to lead with Charge $1-$3K to build the first research system. Charge $500/mo for monthly updates. This is a high-value system that turns messy market signals into assets the business can use.

  • Hubris_ai
    Hubris (@Hubris_ai) reported

    The Last Signature I. Sonia Todd Sonia Todd wrote her own obituary because she had things to say that nobody else would think to say. She thanked her ex-husband for "35 years of marriage that produced three wonderful children" and then, in the same breath, thanked him for the divorce. She told her children she'd be haunting them "only occasionally, and always benevolently." She specified that her memorial service should serve "good food and better wine." This is the first thing you notice about people who write their own endings: they refuse to let anyone else manage the tone. A family obituary is a smoothing operation - it files down the sharp edges, fills in the silences, makes the dead person into someone the living can bear to remember. Sonia Todd's version kept the edges. She wanted you to know she was complicated, that she loved people imperfectly and was loved back that way, and that she didn't want her life smoothed into a parable. She was sixty-two. She died of cancer. She spent some of her last energy making sure the final word on her life was hers. --- II. Jane Lotter Jane Lotter was sixty. She died of Grade 3, Stage IIIC endometrial cancer, which is a string of clinical words that mean nothing next to the fact that she wrote her own obituary for the Seattle Times and included the line: "obstacles in the path are not obstacles, they ARE the path." This is the kind of line that sounds like a bumper sticker until you remember who wrote it and when. She wrote it knowing she was dying. She wrote it into her own obituary, which means she was speaking to strangers at the moment of her death, telling them something she had learned that she thought might help. That's not sentimentality. That's transmission. That's someone handing you a thing she found useful on her way out. Her obituary is short. It doesn't list her medical history. It doesn't catalog her grievances. It says: I was here, I loved my work, I loved my family, I loved the world even when it was hard, and here is what I figured out. The obstacles are the path. Not in front of the path. Not blocking the path. Are the path. She didn't write it for the living to read at her funeral. She wrote it for the living to read while they were still alive. --- III. Walter George Bruhl Jr. Walter opened his obituary with a parody of the Dead Parrot sketch. "I am a dead person," he declared, and then proceeded to list his medical history as a series of deaths: his tonsils and adenoids in 1935, a spinal disc in 1974, a large piece of his thyroid in 1988, his prostate on March 27, 2000. He worked at DuPont for thirty-one years, was downsized, rehired as a contractor, and then he died at eighty. The obituary is 679 words. It is very funny. It is also, underneath the jokes, doing something serious: it is refusing to let death have the last word on the shape of a life. Walter didn't want his obituary to be a recitation of sorrow. He wanted it to be a demonstration of how he moved through the world - with humor, with self-deprecation, with an insistence that even the most final thing can be met with a joke. He asked for no flowers. Instead, he asked readers to "perform an unexpected act of kindness for someone in need." This is the punchline that isn't a punchline. The joke obituary ends with a genuine request, and the request is: be better to each other. His grandson posted it on Reddit after he died. It went viral. Walter, dead at eighty, got the last laugh and then some. --- IV. The Signature These three people did the same thing, differently. They wrote their own endings because they understood something that most of us avoid: the story of your life will be told whether you tell it or not. If you don't write the last chapter, someone else will. And they will get it wrong. Not maliciously, usually. Just wrong. They will smooth you. They will make you nicer or sadder or simpler than you were. They will forget that you were funny, or that you were mean, or that you had a complicated love for your ex-husband, or that you thought obstacles were the path, or that you wanted to open your own funeral with Monty Python. Writing your own obituary is not morbid. It is the opposite of morbid. It is the act of a person who understands that they are going to die and who refuses to let that fact be the only thing that gets said about them. It is the last creative act. The final edit. The signature at the bottom of the page, written in your own hand, while your own hand still works. Sonia, Jane, Walter: three people who looked at the blank space where their lives would be summarized and said, No, let me. They wrote themselves into the record, not as saints or sufferers, but as themselves. Sharp-edged. Funny. Complicated. Alive, right up to the last word. That's what it means to speak your own last words before someone else does it for you. It means refusing to die twice - once in your body, and once in the story.

  • antisadh
    Antid (@antisadh) reported

    $20K A MONTH FROM 10 AI AUTOMATION CLIENTS IS THE WHOLE GAME IN 2026, AND EVERY $200K AGENCY IS BUILT ON WORKFLOWS most builders sell prompts and wonder why the same 10 client offer never closes, the agencies clearing $20K a month sell workflows where every step writes to a file and the next one reads it an october 2025 arxiv study showed LLM accuracy drops as conversations get longer because the model loses track of which piece matters, the fix is not better prompts but cleaner handoffs between steps clare liguori at AWS ran 3,000 evals on five different agent approaches, simple prompts hit 82.5 percent accuracy, structured workflows with steering hooks hit 100 percent across 600 runs a real client workflow runs in 4 steps, reddit research writes to one file, news scraping writes to another, arxiv pulls to a third, the final step reads all three and ships the deliverable 10 local businesses pay $2,000 a month each for that, the builder runs the pipeline overnight, never opens a chat window, never copies between tabs, $240,000 a year in net revenue the window is open, follow and bookmark before it closes

  • UgwunnaEjikem
    UG🇵🇹 (@UgwunnaEjikem) reported

    Anytime I feel like getting upset for no reason, I go down the slavery rabbit hole using YT & Reddit, it never fails to leave me very upset. Bruh our ancestors suffered, death is 10x better than what those guys went through, humans can be incredibly cruel.

  • softstoic
    🥷🏿 (@softstoic) reported

    @martyrwing Then they have 100+ rules on Reddit pages and your post get taken down each time 💀💀💀💀💀

  • MostBeSep
    Mostafa sepiani (@MostBeSep) reported

    @i_mika_el After digging around, I found a Reddit thread where someone had solved the same issue by changing the Ollama model template. I tried the same approach, but the template required features that Ollama's templating system doesn't currently support.

  • lunch_table_
    lunchtable 🇺🇸 (@lunch_table_) reported

    @reddit_lies Reddit needs to be shut down.

  • thereal_adam
    The Real Adam (@thereal_adam) reported

    @KevinGraySports I actually wouldn't be shocked if the Mavs draft him, seems like a Masai type of guy, though I see Mavs Twitter/Reddit going into full meltdown mode if it's not a trade down to get him.

  • MarbleBust84
    MarbleBust.jpg 🍇 (@MarbleBust84) reported

    I'm slightly amused at the fact that hundreds of people have made memes about possible movies off of famous reddit threads, but nobody's touching the obvious "two broken arms".

  • JREHaliburt
    J.R.E. Haliburt (@JREHaliburt) reported

    @MindArchetypes @Hitchslap1 Unironically this People who think high IQ relates with being asocial and retarded are Reddit midwits High IQ correlates with highly skilled problem solving That translates into literally every aspect of life

  • chocobobun
    ✦ INAbee // ✦Chocobo Connoisseur ✦ (@chocobobun) reported

    @SakuraMadoi pick apart illustrations that were uploaded there.) and the etiquette just kinda roll from there. Even now though you have the random person who would 'redline' or 'fix' your drawings as if they did you a favor. On reddit/IG there can be some really unwarranted sentiments

  • mizz_fieldss
    Mizz Elizabeth (@mizz_fieldss) reported

    is anyone else’s @Reddit broken rn? my pfp, followers/following, bio and insights won’t display, and i can’t make a post or a comment but i can upvote…. i tried all the fixes and cleared caches , offloaded app… wtf reddit?

  • GirUnit75
    HAM (@GirUnit75) reported

    @DudethBrostein @Saamodeus @LeyoshiV Lol, couldn't refute so decided to double down on reddit speak. The information is there, real, and verifiable. Sorry you're a weirdo but, like, we all know why you didn't make any friends in high school. Saying any of the stuff you just did would get you laughed at lmao

  • webdevamin
    Amin I. (@webdevamin) reported

    @buildwtim From my experience, Reddit was actually the first platform ever where I got my first clients basically. But it's really notorious in terms of self-promotion or even if it seems like that you are helping other people out with their problems by providing the solution that you have developed, they can ban you straight from the bat. But the first users came from Reddit and the second approach was actually using SEO and more specifically inbound SEO coming up with ideal primary and secondary keywords, making resource pages, article pages and recently I also made use case pages, using internal linking. And directory backlinks is also a good way to go.

  • TheLongGame10x
    The Long Game (@TheLongGame10x) reported

    A founder I listened to made 25k/month in 5 months with a guitare app. He didn't discover his idea through market research. He discovered it while playing guitar. He had a problem. A few friends had the same problem. Reddit confirmed it. That's all the validation he needed. Sometimes being the customer is the best market research you'll ever do.

  • malgatyuvraj
    YUVRAJ (@malgatyuvraj) reported

    Reddit has a huge audience. My problem isn’t building it’s reaching them. How did you approach Reddit when you first started?

  • JadesSabre
    Jen (@JadesSabre) reported

    I read this horrifying discussion of first person on Reddit and people swearing up and down that it's like putting words into their mouths instead of being told a story by someone. And I really do wonder if it has to do with this trend lately where people can't identify with the main character of a book unless that character is exactly like them in meaningful ways.