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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.
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (62%)
- Errors (25%)
- Sign in (13%)
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 | 11 days ago |
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Errors | 11 days ago |
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Sign in | 13 days ago |
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Website Down | 18 days ago |
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Website Down | 20 days ago |
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Website Down | 21 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Lestan (@Lestan21) reported@eliana_jordan I don't use TikTok so don't know But Reddit, it's very easy to get banned from a subreddit. From the platform as a whole it's a little more difficult, but irritate enough mods and you'll just get banned across the whole platform. Problem is that many reddit mods are snowflakes
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✨whateverman✨🎙️ (@what3verman) reportedWoke up to a video taken down for DMCA for a FIFA clip I posted. My account was locked and it stated that a repeated offence will result in suspension. Guess I’m not posting highlights again. Strangely enough one of the videos was “post video” click from another account. The second was something I clipped from Reddit. FIFA is serious about this, probably better to be safe than risk losing your account for engagement. Here’s the legal dated March 30 2026 and I’m assuming they attach this to every complaint?
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My name is Michael. (@NoidCrawler) reported@NBCNews Good. Other people's lifestyle choices shouldn't be celebrated outside of friend circles and Reddit, nor forced on those who don't support it. If straight pride night was a thing, there wouldn't be an issue.
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Mekun Tizichi (@MekunTizichi) reported@LinkofSunshine Only Redditors know the true horrors of Reddit. Look up/Google "Broken Arms Reddit", "Jolly Rancher Reddit", "Coconut Reddit", "Poop Knife Reddit", and "Maggot Girl Reddit". Just mentally prepare yourself for nightmares.
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💭 (@serpentwoman) reportedHonestly I think Reddit (in popular communities at least) and Instagram are miles worse than Twitter. The problem with Twitter is that people are stupid
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MagnusBonus (@kwabamtrooper76) reported@David70078685 @NBCPhiladelphia Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage. Galatians 5:1 Is not this the fast that I have chosen? to loose the bands of wickedness, to undo the heavy burdens, and to let the oppressed go free, and that ye break every yoke? Isaiah 58:6 Not every law in the Old Testament was maintained. The problem here is that you have actually never read the Bible and rely on reddit tier arguments. God bless, have a nice day.
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Yakob from Temu 🏳️⚧️ (@Fontcest_girl69) reported@MewSakuya @oMaMoriTTV @anime_ any time i used it to check if it would work it actually helped me more than the youtube and reddit tutorials because most of the time these people have different settings and layouts than me i dont like using ai though so if the problem doesnt destroy my phone i just ignore it
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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
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RunicAlex (@BanzaiAlex03) reported@petalchere Not exactly what I assume youre talking about but semi related. I remember some guy on reddit that considered 6 to be one of the worst games in the franchise, gave the most illiterate takes ive ever seen on the game and talked down on any FF6 fan Got so obnoxious I blocked him
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Dooderoni (c0mms open!) (@Dooderoni1) reportedentire genre of people going "marioboing12345 was caught on camera gunning down everyone in a dollar general, but he also drew unethical fandom content/medias which is way more evil if you really think about it" while standing in front of a reddit shelf or their plushy collection
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dano (@danoboltup) reported@Grummz the biggest problem the iindustry has is they keep thinking social media people ARE the market. they aren’t. they are a very small % of it. but these devs think reddit and twitter loudmouths are who to appeal to. so they make the games for them and they fail monetarily
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Praveen Kumar (@praveenkumaryo) reportedWhy My Digital History Is Triggering Active Hacking Attempts on Anyone I Interact With (The Cost of Pirated Software) Since 2011, I had a habit of digital hoarding - collecting and testing cracked games and expensive enterprise software (AutoCAD, Autodesk, Ansys, Adobe) just to see them run. In college and later in my professional life, I freely distributed these terabytes of pirated software to friends and colleagues, completely unaware of the massive digital footprint and security liabilities I was creating. By signing into these cracked builds with my personal email, my credentials were leaked to respective servers and weaponized through data breaches, allowing bad actors to tie my email, unique username handles, phone number, and social media profiles together. The real-world consequences started falling like dominoes. In 2017, a friend’s startup was targeted with Google account hacks and an Autodesk audit after their residential IP address registered as a business entity using cracked software from me. When I joined the rocket startup AgniKul Cosmos in 2019, I distributed these software packages again. The fallout was severe: the entire team began receiving targeted, unknown messages on LinkedIn and WhatsApp phishing calls; our Wi-Fi became unusable unless restarted; and our founder's email was compromised to spam the team, forcing me to wipe and reinstall every office machine. I later found out the startup faced massive licensing fines after audit visits. Even after moving to a spacecraft design startup, the exact same disruptive patterns followed. The targeting escalated heavily during the 2020 lockdown. After noticing a suspicious Microsoft account login alert that perfectly correlated with an Argentinian "ethical hacker" visiting my Premium LinkedIn profile, I confronted him directly via InMail. That very night, a coordinated wave of login alerts hit my Reddit, PayPal, and other social media services. Because I use a consistent username across platforms like Twitter/X and LinkedIn, these actors have mapped my entire network. They’ve tracked my investor interactions, used malicious links in bio pages to harvest my home IP addresses (forcing me to rely on a VPN to restore normal speeds), and targeted my family members. Because of this relentless surveillance, I keep my current venture strictly in stealth mode and refuse to update my employer details on LinkedIn to shield my current team. This is a public apology and a massive heads-up. Recently, this targeting has shifted outward to anyone I publicly engage with. Whomever I interact with, reply to, or tag on Twitter/X is immediately seeing a surge in suspicious login alerts and hacking attempts on their own accounts. If you are interacting with me publicly, please enable robust 2FA, monitor your active login sessions, avoid clicking any random links, and stay highly vigilant. My past digital hoarding has turned into an active security vector, and I am sharing this so you can protect your data before they target you next.
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lunchtable 🇺🇸 (@lunch_table_) reported@reddit_lies Reddit needs to be shut down.
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NiteCapsLSU (@LSUomaha8) reported@AnonymousLeftie komi is a mentally ill reddit freak who needs to be put down. You live behind a computer and have no power in the real world
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Cictor 🐆 (@Cicctor) reported@rTerraria Your error was posting on Reddit in the first place
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Dumb Idiot ⚔️ (@HundredHandSlut) reported@ViceOnceOrTwice "peon" Reddit is down the hall and to the left my good sir!
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Md. Mehedi Hasan Rakib (@mehedi_u) reportedMore content in 2026 is a liability, not an asset. 68% of the global population, 5.66 billion people, now uses social media. And yet 35% of users say their trust in what they see on these platforms has dropped in the last 12 months alone. The cause is direct. AI-generated content has made it trivially easy to flood feeds. Sprout Social's March 2026 data found that 56% of users encounter AI slop often or very often, and 83% see it at least sometimes. Feeds feel synthetic. Users feel it. They are responding by going elsewhere. Reddit grew 19% in a single quarter. Substack traffic jumped 67% year over year. WhatsApp, a platform with no algorithmic feed and no strangers, now sits as the third largest social network on the planet at 2.9 billion users. People are not leaving social media. They are leaving broadcast social media. This distinction is what most brand strategies are getting wrong right now. The instinct when reach drops is to post more. The data says the opposite. Content perceived as AI-generated now suffers engagement penalties of 20 to 35% compared to human-created alternatives. More volume of low-trust content compounds the problem rather than solving it. The brands tracking ahead of this are making a different bet. Sephora's Beauty Insider Community has 25 million members generating social proof directly on product pages. Creator ad spend has reached $29.5 billion, up from $13.9 billion in 2021, because audiences trust people who are already customers and advocates, not polished brand accounts optimized for reach. Follower count is not your distribution. Community depth is. The practical move is not complicated. Stop optimizing for volume and start optimizing for depth. 200 deeply engaged community members outperform 30,000 passive followers on every metric that drives commercial outcomes: conversions, referrals, and user-generated content at the point of sale. Three decisions worth making now: 1. Run social listening to locate your most vocal advocates. They are already posting without you, and they are the most credible voice your brand has. 2. Build presence on one community platform, Reddit, Substack, or Discord, rather than broadcasting thinly across six. 3. Audit your content mix. If AI is generating the output, a human must own the editorial voice, the perspective, and the actual argument. The social commerce market is projected to reach $27.5 trillion by 2034. The brands that will capture that commerce are not the ones with the most content. They are the ones with communities that trust them enough to buy. In 2026, trust is the distribution channel. #socialmediamarketing #communitybuilding #contentmarketing
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Pyruuu 👧🍵🗿🔨➡️AX & Serendipity🩷💛🩵 (@Pyruuuuuu) reported@JCONvt @glitchshay An infamous reddit ama about a guy who broke both of his arms when he was a teen and because he was very moody his mother decided he needed some stress relief, and then it continued. Easy to find if you search "2 broken arms reddit"
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aisama.code (@aisama_code) reportedSaaS idea validation start with a problem map Before building anything, I want to know: - who has the problem - how they solve it now - what tools they already pay for - what they complain about - what workflow is broken - what result they actually want ! AI is useful when it helps structure this research the workflow: idea -> target user -> pain sources -> competitor map -> repeated complaints -> first offer -> test good inputs: > reddit threads / X posts / reviews / docs / pricing pages / support forums / youtube comments / discord / telegram communities the output should be small: > problem / user / current workaround / existing tools / gap / first feature / first offer / reason to stop / continue ! AI doesn't have to "validate" an idea, AI collects evidence the decision is still manual research -> evidence -> memo -> first offer -> small test
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Faina Shpund (@HeyFaina) reported@ParthProductX Go where they already complain about the problem. Reddit, niche forums, DMs. Reply to 100 people one at a time. Boring, free, works.
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N-Word Scissorhands (@Kawaii__Key) reportedJust went down a r/catbongos rabbit hole on Reddit
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JezzJul🍉 (@JuzzJello) reported@getmetatable The 3.2 year old Reddit Post that explained how to solve this problem has been deleted, sorry. Can't find it anywhere else.
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Audrey (@Hepburn_ve) reportedWtf is Ripple actually doing? It’s been a while since the XRP lawsuit was dropped, freeing Ripple from the chains it was binded. After the whole SEC drama cooled down, you’d think there’d be a ton of public news, big partnerships, real adoption stories but it feels… quiet. No massive updates, no flashy announcements, no big cross-border payment rollout proof, nothing trending. It was projected towards replacing old SWIFT rails. Yet outside niche corners of Twitter/Reddit, I don’t see screenshots of pilot programmes, banks actually sending stuff of real transactions with XRP live on the ledger. Japan ? no update. By when can we expect Ripple to just breakout with its amazing system ? Seriously Ripple had lot of time since past half decade to just get things ready and get things real once the case was dropped. But it feels like no one is serious out there
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Saptrishi Mishra (@saptrishi12) reported@ykykaman @abhsk_0x @_Creation22 Even a non-IITian can tell these are fake. The grammatical errors alone give it away. Also, if you're really his neighbour, why did you need to get these details from Reddit? Either your neighbour thinks he's smart, or you think you can fool us by fabricating stories.
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threadline (@threadlineCX) reportedMost companies don’t have a “lack of customer feedback” problem. They have a “too much feedback, not enough clarity” problem. Reviews, surveys, tickets, calls, chats, Reddit, app stores… The signal is there. Threadline helps teams pull the story out of the noise.
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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
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JFK Files (@read_jfk_files) reported🤔there was an old line from a Snowden file where NSA boasted about how they always think in terms of "do the impossible" and that's how they stay far ahead of everyone else because nobody can even think about what they are doing. how could you take down the Starlink weapon system without triggering Kessler syndrome? i like this idea posted on Reddit because it is a big idea, it sounds technically impossible and it requires such a huge scale that is bigger than the thing it attacks. this follows a principle similar to "the Bitter Lesson", but for weapons instead of data/AI. How do you take down 20,000+ small satellites which are the size of a couch? Easy, sorta. you deploy 40,000 smaller satellites the size of a microwave, which have grabber arms, they grab the Starlinks, then fire their small boosters and force the Starlinks down towards the Earth. this avoids the catastrophe of explosions in space and filling all the orbital planes with microscopic debris moving 17,000mph, like a giant shredder that makes going into orbit become impossible. i bet Starlink doesn't even have a defense against this type of attack because this is such a ridiculous engineering problem that nobody would believe it might be possible. i bet it is possible. but the only way it would work is a non-US country will need to clone SpaceX's re-usable rockets to make it scale. China is already pretty close. so the Starlink head start door closes in about 2-5 years.
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Mitul (@indiemitul) reportedMini SaaS #12 Most founders ask: "How do I get more customers?" Wrong question. instead ask, "Where do my customers already spend time?" Your first customers are usually hiding in plain sight: → Reddit communities → Facebook groups → X conversations → Slack communities → Niche forums Stop trying to reach everyone. Go where the problem is already being discussed. Read the complaints. Answer questions. Become useful. Because the best marketing doesn't feel like marketing. It feels like help. And people buy from those who help them first. Where did you find your first customer?
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AI Elite Thinkers (@AIEliteThinkers) reportedAn accountant on Reddit put the whole verification problem in one line: "If it cannot quote, the claim is invented." Before any AI output touches a workpaper, make it cite the source cell, the source row, the source document. No quote, no entry. The check takes seconds. Skipping it is how phantom data gets a sign-off.
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Adryenn Ashley (@adryenn) reported@timhwang I’m agnostic but every model I’ve built was raised from the ground up like a child with ethics built in and reinforced. Not sin specifically but hardlined boundaries with only very narrow exceptions. The problem with the larger models is they ingested Reddit so the troll ethos is now in the DNA.