Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
Problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.
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.
July 17: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 10:20 AM EST. Are you also affected? 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 (57%)
- Errors (22%)
- Sign in (20%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
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Sign in | 5 days ago |
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Website Down | 6 days ago |
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Sign in | 9 days ago |
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Sign in | 10 days ago |
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Website Down | 14 days ago |
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Website Down | 15 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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𝙲𝚢𝚋𝚎𝚛unc 𝟚𝟘𝟜𝟡 (@cyberchudia) reportedYou know, is razorfoost’s ethnically ambiguous doppelgänger on the reddit-left resisting dAtA cEnTeRs or obeying a partisan mob? The kind of retards that would have no problem with the Biden admin pushing the CHIPS Act through, but any tech infrastructure advancement now is icky.
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The Agentic Operator (@AgenticOperator) reportedGoogle AI recommends products while running a $175B ad business. ChatGPT is now showing sponsored products inside the chat. Perplexity is experimenting with sponsored answers. Every AI engine is monetizing. The "neutral AI recommendation" is dying before most founders even understood it existed. When AI tells your buyer "here's the best product for you," there's no way to know if that answer is earned or paid. No ad labels. No sponsored tags. Just a clean conversational answer that looks exactly like an organic one. I watched this same pattern kill trust in Google organic search a decade ago. Ads crept in. Labels shrank. Eventually nobody could tell the difference. Now it's happening inside AI answers, except faster and with zero transparency. Here's what this means for founders. Don't celebrate "AI recommends us" without asking why. Was it your structured data? Your reviews? Or did a competitor's ad budget push you down? The brands that win long term aren't the ones chasing AI recommendations blindly. They're the ones building real signals AI has to cite regardless of who's paying: independent reviews, Reddit mentions, editorial coverage, comparison content. Ads can buy placement. They can't buy consensus across 5 independent sources. That's the moat.
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PoliticsBabe (@Bellhookschild) reportedThe CS Reddit thread is interesting people mention leaving and they're hit with but the pension etc and personally I believe that's a big issue in that sector people straying just for the benefits
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Spreadsheeticus (@spreadsheeticus) reported@BarterBlex They’re not having trouble buying houses, though that’s a total reddit nonsense
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DDSBoston.com (@ddsboston24) reportedSomeone asked me on Reddit yesterday if organic cotton is *truly* sustainable. I love that question. It cuts straight to the rot in this industry. The easy answer? Yes. The real answer? It’s complicated, and that’s the problem. For years, the industry has peddled this narrative that "organic" is the end-all, be-all. And it’s a crucial piece of the puzzle, don't get me wrong. We switched our entire supply chain to GOTS-certified organic cotton because the alternative – conventional cotton – is a chemical nightmare. Conventional cotton uses something like 16% of the world’s insecticides and 7% of pesticides. That’s not just an environmental problem; it's a human health crisis for the farmers and communities exposed to that toxic cocktail. Our organic cotton uses 95% less water than conventional, and zero synthetic pesticides or fertilizers. That’s a massive win. But here’s where the narrative breaks down, and why it keeps me up at night. We’re still producing *things*. Lots of them. Even if those things are made from organic cotton, if they’re designed to be worn a few times and discarded, we’re just swapping one form of waste for another. We’re still feeding the beast of consumption. This is the systemic failure I founded DDS Boston to address. We’re not just selling hoodies; we're building a movement against disposable culture. Our Print-on-Demand model is a direct response to the absurdity of massive inventory waste. Why produce thousands of units of a garment that might never sell, only to end up in a landfill or a discount bin? We produce *only* what is ordered. That’s not just a business model; it's a philosophical stance. It means zero deadstock, zero overproduction waste. The industry wants you to think "sustainable" is a simple checkbox. Organic? Check. Recycled? Check. But they deliberately obscure the bigger picture: the sheer volume of *stuff* being churned out, the planned obsolescence baked into designs, the constant pressure to buy *more*. We’re not just fighting against toxic chemicals in fields. We’re fighting against a cultural addiction to novelty and disposability. We’re fighting against the illusion that a "sustainable" tag on a mass-produced item absolves us of responsibility. Our organic cotton hoodies aren’t just about the feel of the fabric against your skin – though the substantial 8.3 oz/yd² GSM is something you can feel. They’re about the weight of intention behind them. They’re a rejection of the fast fashion cycle. They’re a statement that you value durability, ethical sourcing, and a supply chain that doesn't poison the planet or its people. They’re designed for the builder, the creator, the one who understands that true value isn't in disposability, but in enduring quality. So, is organic cotton sustainable? It’s a vital component, a necessary step away from the abyss. But true sustainability requires a fundamental shift in how we produce and consume. It demands intentionality. It demands a rejection of the "more is more" mentality. It demands that we, as a brand and as a community, are honest about the challenges and committed to pushing beyond the easy answers. That’s the bigger picture we’re building here. That’s the standard we’re setting, not just for ourselves, but for the entire industry.
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junior (@ijnoru) reported@HDRgameAnalysis I'm not being able to use HDR on Linux (Bazzite), and many are reporting the same on Reddit. Hope they fix it
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Liza (@elizabeth__db) reported@sappholives83 An added issue with these Reddit threads is that anyone who posts a reply saying anything along the lines of, “Yes the thing that prevents you being a woman is that you are male, perhaps go to therapy and stop your transition,” gets banned so it’s a DANGEROUS echo chamber.
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Benito Tortellini (@cartoon_magoo) reported@Aintropy @Noahpinion i don't think solutions to erdos problems are hiding in reddit comments waiting to be regurgitated
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Heiwksnbrehue (@jeheudhevev) reported@reddit_lies This was upvoted and not taken down solely because the poster was Pakistani. If it was a white woman, she would have gotten banned from reddit
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ColaBlizzard 🇮🇳 (@colablizzard) reported@thehawkeyex Even pro BJP reddit sub reddit are filled with posts and heavy down vote for anyone not supporting this. Mods also paid off and changing DP etc.
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DDSBoston.com (@ddsboston24) reportedSomeone asked me on Reddit yesterday if our raw cotton bags are 100% organic. It's a fair question. The industry loves to slap on everything, like it's some magic phrase. But the reality? It's far more complex. Let’s break down what "100% organic" even means for a cotton bag. First, the cotton itself. Conventional cotton farming is a disaster. It’s thirsty, it uses a ton of pesticides that decimate soil health and poison waterways, and it depletes the land. So, if your bag is made from that, "100% organic" is a lie. We saw the data: the textile waste crisis is staggering, but the *inputs* are just as bad. That's why we went GOTS-certified organic. GOTS means no toxic chemicals, significantly less water usage, and better soil management. It’s not perfect, but it’s the closest you can get to a clean slate for the raw material. That’s the first piece of the puzzle. Then there’s the manufacturing. Where was it sewn? Who sewed it? What were the conditions? Were dyes used? If so, were they low-impact, or did they create toxic effluent? This is where the "Bamboo Scandal" nearly crippled us. We learned the hard way that you can’t just trust a label. You have to build transparency into the entire chain. For our bags, we use factories that are not just compliant, but actively audited for ethical labor practices. We can trace the thread back. That’s not a happy accident; it’s a deliberate choice to combat the industry’s inherent opacity. And what about the "bag" part? How is it made? Is it printed with toxic inks? Is it sewn with polyester thread (which is plastic)? Even the thread matters. For our bags, we use organic cotton thread. We aim for zero plastic in the final product. This level of detail is why you don't see "100% organic" stamped everywhere on our site. It feels disingenuous. We prefer to show you the *proof*: the certifications, the audit summaries, the breakdown of our costs. The truth is, the entire fashion and textile industry is built on a foundation of exploitation and waste. Organic is often just a marketing veneer. The real work is in dismantling that system, piece by piece, with verifiable data and unwavering commitment. It means choosing materials that regenerate, not deplete. It means ensuring every hand that touches the product is treated with dignity. It means accepting that perfection is a journey, and transparency about the challenges is more valuable than a false claim of purity. So, are our raw cotton bags 100% organic? No. They are the result of a relentless pursuit to be *as* organic as possible, by confronting the industry's failures head-on. We don't sell a fantasy; we offer a tangible step away from the disposable culture that’s suffocating our planet. That’s the real value. Check our Transparency Ledger to see the proof.
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Daniella (@dragonia_queen) reportedThis makes zero sense because when she came in Priya was liked she's a favourite on reddit, she doesn't have an issue with Mica and Samraj I think she comes off as rogue she just didn't think they should stay cause she wanted to protect Martha #loveisland #loveislanduk
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Mike Scully (@Mike_Scully_) reportedReddit is basically free market research. Search r/SomebodyMakeThis. People are literally posting problems they want solved. Find one that sounds painful. Open Claude Code. Build the first version in a weekend. You don’t need a genius startup idea. You need a real problem, a simple tool, and the ability to ship fast.
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THE NEXT DIDDY😈🍑 (@ghettoxlakeshow) reported@ReavesGotMe Jay jay reddit gettin his new house burned down if he plays jake laravia over cameron carr
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Lisa Kuhnley (@LisaJKuhnley) reportedThey’re never gonna let me be popular. The moment I start to gain any sort of real traction they’re going to invent some reason to delete my post restrict my account or download me to Hell or whatever I mean every time my post starts to attract views on Reddit they invent some reason to take it down. They do not like real people. They do not like real people who make Valid arguments. They do not like people who speak the truth they do not like people who represent a real danger to the system that thrives on people maintaining the status quo of pretending not to notice that you’re all so completely full of ****. The point is if you’re waiting for me to go viral it’s never gonna happen in the end if it does, it’s not gonna matter because I’m not gonna farm engagement for you anymore. That’s not what I’m here to do.
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WickedCanadianG (@CanadianWicked) reported@LilyWonderland5 @Peppeyroniepiza @InsidiousTeaCup Lol "that SOUNDS bad" you have 0 remorse,0 sympathy and do not believe it at all unless you see it from your reddit mod. People like you are the problem. ****** sympathizer
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🇹🇷🇹🇷☪️ Ƶey ڭ ☪️🇹🇷🇹🇷 (@TwtZey) reported@dawodthenerd calm down vro its just a reddit atheist 😭😭😭
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Alvi (@Alvi19478870) reportedLibido will go down drastically. Uncontrollable libido too but I do think estrogen plays some part in libido. There was a post on RP Reddit iirc
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Bryan Ng (@boomerrbryan) reportedYou spent $380,000 on a degree so that a stranger with a laptop could summarize your knowledge and outsell you with it This is happening in real time across every licensed profession. A physical therapist posts a 2,000-word guide on a forum explaining exactly how to fix a torn rotator cuff at home. She does this for free because her profession trained her to be helpful and she genuinely likes teaching strangers on the internet Some guy finds the post. Feeds it into AI. Gets a 12-minute video script back. An AI character delivers it on a channel called "Dr. Movement" that has 210,000 subscribers and pulls $18,000/month between ads and a $34 mobility program that is entirely composed of exercises she described for free across 30 different forum answers "Dr. Movement" is not a doctor. "Dr. Movement" has never rehabbed a patient. "Dr. Movement" is a rendered face selected from a dropdown menu by someone whose entire understanding of physical therapy came from stealing this woman's free posts She has 290 followers on Instagram. She posts clinical content using proper anatomical terms. Her audience is other physical therapists who already know everything she's saying. She is the most overqualified person in a room that contains no customers Her knowledge paid for his Porsche. She paid for her knowledge with $380,000 in tuition and 7 years of clinical residency. He paid for her knowledge with a $20/month AI subscription and the moral flexibility to package someone else's expertise as his own And the worst part: she could crush him overnight. She has 30 years of patient outcomes he can never fake. She has specific cases, specific recoveries, specific complications she navigated that no forum scrape will ever replicate. The depth of her experience is the one thing AI can't generate from a Reddit thread But she won't post. She thinks the internet is for the "Dr. Movement" types. She thinks serious professionals don't make videos. She thinks her referral network and her reputation in the physical therapy community are enough They were enough. 5 years ago. Before 210,000 people decided to trust a character that doesn't exist over a professional they've never heard of Any professional sitting on real expertise who refuses to put it online is funding their own replacement. Every day they don't post is another day some operator is packaging their free advice and building an audience of their potential clients You can keep posting for 290 followers who already have your credentials. Or you can let AI build a version of your expertise that reaches the 6 million people a month who actually need it and will pay for it. Under $7 per video. No camera required we currently have a waitlist for the tool that replaces your entire production team and makes YouTube actually work for your business. waitlist link is in bio. spots are limited.
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hool (@hulicok) reported@CloudMonkeyTWT Reddit is a platform full of terrible takes and echo chambers. How did it become a worse platform than twitter lol
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#defundcbs (@bbukhia) reported@xd3rek reddit is down the hall to the left
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Milhan (@milhan_mohammad) reportedThe two screenshots below show why AI search is changing Local SEO. 👀 In Screenshot 1, I asked ChatGPT: "Who's the best HVAC company near Dallas?" It returned a broad list of reputable contractors. In Screenshot 2, I changed the prompt to: "Who offers 24/7 commercial HVAC repairs in North Dallas with a 10-year parts warranty?" The recommendations changed. 🧐 The more specific the intent, the fewer businesses qualify. That's the opportunity. (Save this for later and follow for more) Getting cited by AI is great. But basic AI citations are quickly becoming a commodity. If someone asks ChatGPT, Google AI Mode, or another AI assistant, "Who's the best HVAC company near Dallas?", the AI can easily pull a list of businesses from Google Business Profile, Bing Places, directories, and review platforms. Being one of ten options isn't winning. The real opportunity comes with the second question. This is where most contractors disappear. Raw citations help you get into the conversation. Content engineering helps you become the recommendation. The goal isn't simply to appear across the web. It's to build enough evidence that AI can confidently connect your business to highly specific customer intent. That means creating a digital footprint that answers questions like: • Which neighborhoods do you serve? • What emergency services do you provide? • What warranties do you offer? • What equipment and brands do you specialize in? • What types of projects have you completed? • What do customers consistently mention in reviews? Those answers shouldn't exist only on your website. They should also be reinforced through Google reviews, Yelp, BBB, Angi, Reddit, Nextdoor, local news mentions, and other trusted third-party sources. This is where Local SEO is evolving. It's no longer just about ranking in Google Search or the Google Maps Pack. It's about building the trusted digital footprint that AI uses when recommending home service businesses like HVAC companies, plumbers, roofers, and electricians. AI search isn't just a faster Google search. It's a conversational filtering system. Every follow-up question reduces the number of businesses that qualify. The contractors who win won't necessarily have the biggest marketing budget. They'll have the clearest, most trusted, and most consistent digital footprint for the exact problem the homeowner is trying to solve. Stop optimizing just to appear on the list. Start building enough authority and context that AI has every reason to recommend your business first.
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kvick (@kvickart) reported@TheSpacerr i enjoy reddit just as a content consumer, but trying to post and engage on the platform is pretty terrible in general. Especially the mods, the mods are the worst people I've ever interacted with
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ana (@vavaChou75029) reported+ Also the hate towards Danyal and Sajal both is so forced I can't with it. Specially hate towards Sajal on Reddit. They are dissecting each and every scene saying it's slow saying it's fast why not ppl either watch or stfu. Hating towards Sarbiya without any reason making them+
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Alex (@alexscalesinfo) reportedone of our clients is doing $1m/year in profit with his info offer and even though the webinars, the sales team, and all the tactics were important to GET him there keeping him there is a completely different game and it comes down to one thing: being ethical because most people selling info are optimizing for this month's cash and slowly killing their business overselling their audience they close people who clearly can't afford it they promise results they can't deliver and it it works... for about 90 days then the refunds and the chargebacks start, suddenly there's a reddit post when you look up "[NAME] scam", and your info offer begins to die although morals are a big aspect of it as well, selling info ethically isn't necessarily about that it's the only thing that lets your offer live longer than a year so whenever you see people larping, lying, or outright scamming... keep in mind they're all gonna be gone by next year the ones who who make this a sustainable cashflow business do it ethically
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The Agentic Operator (@AgenticOperator) reportedTalked to a founder last week. Spent $120K on AI visibility. All of it went to engineering. Schema fixes. Structured data. Rendering. His CTO told him it was handled. AI still wasn't recommending them. I looked at the whole picture. The technical stuff was clean. Actually well done. But that's only 30% of what gets you cited. Nobody on his team was writing content that answers what buyers actually ask AI. No comparison pages because legal blocked them. The FAQ section was marketing fluff, not real questions. That's 35% of the game and they hadn't touched it. Reddit? Zero presence. Reviews? All on their own site. YouTube? Nothing. AI checks these sources before it recommends anyone. 25% of the equation and the budget was zero. Tracking? Nobody was monitoring which engines cited them week to week. Citations drift 40-60% monthly. They had no idea what was working. His $120K fixed the foundation. But nobody built the house on top of it. I've seen this exact situation play out at a dozen companies this year. The CEO delegates AI visibility to engineering. Engineering solves the engineering part. The other 70% sits untouched because nobody owns it. This isn't a technical problem. It's a leadership blind spot.
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JameGriff (@Jamesgr9714) reported@StFrazzles Ill never forget when half way through s17 it was “Omg Jewels for the crown!” People wanna seem like they called it early - mama we all have reddit sit your basic *** down.
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𝘀𝘂𝗻𝗱𝗮𝘆 (@ilike_sundays) reported@B1ush_bun10 is this **** a popular take on ln fandoms outside of twt???? I swear down last time I saw a serious take like that was on Reddit years ago. ppl really be playing w their eyes closed 💔 truke on the mono glaze tho, he legit is no better than her
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starting a death cult for the vibes (@EEAAOPILLED) reportedI think they should actually start trying to hurt that ******* purpose after ten minutes of scrolling reddit on the issue
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Ronnie B. (@RonnieNapolis) reported🚨🚨The Massive LinkedIn & AI Scraper Illusion: Why the Job Search System Is Mathematically Broken🚨🚨 The Texas AG launched a formal fraud investigation into LinkedIn. The state issued a Civil Investigative Demand to uncover whether they profit from fake, inactive "ghost jobs" while aggressively marketing high-priced Premium Subscriptions. This crackdown is a massive validation. Job seekers spend hours tailoring resumes only to face silence. The Texas investigation shows you aren't crazy, you are trapped in a corporate data-harvesting ecosystem designed to farm info for profit. The rot goes deeper. LinkedIn allows its feeds to be polluted by predatory AI scrapers like Jobgether, Lensa, and The Ladders. They use keyword loops to trap applicants in phantom pipelines. Has ANYONE ever gotten a real job from Jobgether? Community tracking on Reddit says no. They have zero corporate partnerships or lines to actual hiring managers. They are just software aggregators running scraping scripts. How the data-scraping trap works: The Scraper Loop: A bot crawls real corporate career portals, finding open roles.The Masking Protocol: It steals the text, hides the employer's name, and re-posts it on LinkedIn as an "Easy Apply" trap. The Capture: You submit, and they immediately email you to register an account on their platform to "complete" the process. The Paywall: They mine your resume data and try to up-sell you on premium features or resume scoring tools for a job that won't be sent to a real human manager. Why allow this? It's highly profitable. Nearly 28% of active listings are ghost jobs. Corporations keep them open to project fake growth to investors or build resume backlogs. LinkedIn ignores this because desperation drives Premium subscriptions. To win, you have to out-engineer the system. Stop using unverified "Easy Apply" links. Paste a unique sentence from a job post into a clean search engine to find the true company origin, and apply directly. Better yet, route your credentials straight to a live human recruiter. The job market is a rigged casino. Build your own infrastructure, protect your IP, and force them to evaluate you on your terms.