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Dropbox status: access issues and outage reports

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Full Outage Map

Dropbox is a file hosting service operated by American company Dropbox, Inc., headquartered in San Francisco, California, that offers cloud storage, file synchronization, personal cloud, and client software.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Dropbox 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 Dropbox. 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 Dropbox users through our website.

  • 50% Errors (50%)
  • 38% Sign in (38%)
  • 13% Website Down (13%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Bournemouth Sign in 11 days ago
Paramaribo Errors 1 month ago
Bogotá Website Down 1 month ago
Auxerre Errors 1 month ago
Salt Lake City Sign in 1 month ago
Madrid Errors 2 months ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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Dropbox Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • auritrack
    Auritrack - AI-powered expense tracker (@auritrack) reported

    How $9.99 a month for “just one app” became the most profitable business model of the last decade. The math behind subscription creep Adobe had a very huge effect on Photoshop boxed sales in 2013, same software, now $20.99 a month forever. Revenue went from $4.4 billion to over $21 billion in ten years. The product didn’t change, the billing did. Companies Learned Something Brutal: - People fight a $200 charge - People ignore a $9.99 one So they sliced everything into $9.99s. Spotify, Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Max, Apple TV+, Peacock, Paramount+, Audible, Kindle Unlimited, NYT, WSJ, Substacks, Notion, Dropbox, iCloud, Google One. Add a gym membership and a meal kit and you’re at $400 a month before rent. The Trick: every individual service feels reasonable, the bundle feels invisible, banks don’t surface the total and apps don’t show what else you’re paying but you have to add it up yourself. Most people are off by 60% when asked to guess their monthly subscription spend. Banks reviewed this in 2024, off by $130 a month on average. The fix isn’t dramatic. Pull last month’s statement, highlight every recurring charge, cancel three. Most people save $80+ a month with that one exercise. Auritrack does this automatically, every recurring charge gets a tag, the forgotten ones get flagged. Follow for more money stories.

  • heynavtoor
    Nav Toor (@heynavtoor) reported

    Open your bank statement right now. Count every subscription. Netflix. Spotify. ChatGPT Plus. Claude. Adobe. Apple One. Disney+. iCloud. YouTube Premium. Audible. NYT. Dropbox. Notion. Gym. Dating app. A 2026 study found the average American spends $219 a month on subscriptions. That is $2,628 a year. But they estimate they spend $86 a month. 74% of people admit they have forgotten about a recurring charge. 42% are currently paying for a subscription they have stopped using. A Portuguese developer named Miguel Ribeiro got tired of bleeding money to forgotten subscriptions. He lives in Berlin and works as a senior frontend engineer at eBay Kleinanzeigen by day. At night he tried Billbot and a bunch of paid web apps. None of them worked. Some of them charged him a monthly fee to track his monthly fees. So in October 2023 he wrote his own. The repo today: → 7,922 stars → 365 forks → GPL-3.0 licensed → Pushed last week → 69 followers on the founder's profile It is called Wallos. You self-host it. It tracks every subscription, every renewal date, every category, every currency, and shows you the actual number on one screen. Here is the wildest part: The subscription companies designed the system this way on purpose. 72% of people set everything to auto-pay because the checkout flow defaults to it. Cancellation pages are buried 5 clicks deep. Some require a phone call during business hours. A 2022 FTC report called this "dark patterns" and Adobe is paying $150 million in a settlement for hiding cancellation fees this exact way. Miguel did not raise venture capital. He did not write a Medium post. He did not go on a podcast. He shipped one PHP app from his apartment in Berlin and now thousands of people use it to claw back hundreds of dollars a year. The honest part: It needs a tiny server (a $5 Raspberry Pi works). You have to enter subscriptions yourself, it does not auto-detect from your bank. The UI is functional, not gorgeous. The author still works a day job and ships updates in his spare time. Berlin. One developer. The companies that auto-charge you forever finally have an enemy.

  • ishripalgandhi
    Shripal Gandhi (@ishripalgandhi) reported

    Hey @Dropbox ... Your advanced customer service is horrible! I have benefit chasing them for an important issue since more than 2 days (not counting the weekend) now and I still do not have a resolution. Is it that your reps are allowed to answer only one email per client per day??

  • 1stplaceee__
    yera. (@1stplaceee__) reported

    You down for my nasty FaceTime and Dropbox video HMU📨📥💦🍑

  • ElyasAlemi
    Elyas (@ElyasAlemi) reported

    @drewhouston @Dropbox big call. the co-ceo move forces the operating-system rewrite a single ceo can postpone forever. as a 17yo technical co-founder still 1 month into a saas, the thing i'm curious about is what the first conversation looked like. did you go in with the structure already drafted, or did it surface from a problem you couldn't both keep solving the old way?

  • MollySOShea
    Molly O’Shea (@MollySOShea) reported

    BREAKING: Merge Launches ‘Agent Handler’ Control AI Access, Tokenmaxxed $$$ Bills, & Stop Mass Data Leaks "We don't trust agents" "The second you connect it to tools, that's where everything goes wrong." OpenAI. Perplexity. Netflix. Uber. Mistral. Dropbox. JPMorgan.. all quietly run on @merge_api Co-Founders CEO @Shensi Ding & CTO @GilFeig dive into it all We cover: - MASSIVE AI Security scares are just starting - Tokenmaxxing bills - Agent Handler - Gateway routing - Winning enterprise logos - The SaaSpocalypse 𝐓𝐈𝐌𝐄𝐒𝐓𝐀𝐌𝐏𝐒 (00:00) Shensi Ding & Gil Feig, Co-Founders at Merge (01:04) Three products. One big bet (03:20) How Merge made the AI pivot (04:42) The Classic Innovator’s Dilemma (05:58) Building culture around AI (07:10) The leverage nobody’s talking about (08:52) Codex vs Claude Code (09:15) The scale nobody knew about (09:47) SaaS, Finance, and the Biggest AI Labs (10:46) Why AI companies buy differently (12:04) What AI sales actually looks like (13:04) The Fastest sales cycles in the market (14:35) Why is Cybersecurity broken (15:59) Merge's solution to agent security (19:16) Mythos, Wiz, and the GitHub Hack (22:34) 1,000 Bot signups in one hour (23:23) Real reason companies pay ransom to hackers (25:43) The State of AI Infrastructure Costs (26:41) Internal AI Governance is the next big problem (29:28) Most Popular Integrations on Merge (30:54) Big Giants are planning big moves (31:54) What does Salesforce going headless exactly mean (33:41) Agents don’t need a UI anymore (36:59) Can this AI generation actually adapt (38:25) What Merge looks for in talent (41:25) The SaaSpocalypse is real (45:03) Are AI valuations actually insane? (47:11) How Merge landed OpenAI, Perplexity, Netflix & Uber (49:02) The Metrics that actually drive the business (49:58) Biggest misconceptions in tech right now (51:55) The market is finally catching up to Merge

  • ScarcityMan
    ScarcityMan (@ScarcityMan) reported

    You might not believe it, but it is in fact happening, because it increases the cost, time, and difficulty of running a node. "Large" is a matter of opinion, but is clearly a quantity which would add up over time and have an impact. Why don't you want nodes to be as easy to run for people as possible, so that the maximum number of people can participate in the network, making it more valuable and more resilient? Why is that not something you want, to the extent that you will spend time arguing against it? What exactly is your stake in nodes being more difficult to run than they need to be? Why don't you care about spam? Why don't you care that it obviously, as it does everywhere it exists, degrades the quality of the thing being used? Why do think bitcoin will just be fine and go on forever while watching it transform into a poor imitation of dropbox? Why would anyone interested in bitcoin as money continue to use it when it becomes more and more infested with non-monetary data? Why don't you care about the possibility of truly bad stuff ending up on chain until the end of time? Do you think Satoshi made a mistake? Should he have created "Bitdata" instead? Do we not need to fix the world's money? You good with USD or whatever else is inflating away to nothing? So many questions that will never be answered...

  • caneallesta
    Cane Allesta (@caneallesta) reported

    Your password manager has never actually managed anything. It just nagged you. That changes with iOS 27. At WWDC26, Apple announced what might be the clearest example of agentic AI shipping in a consumer product this year: the Passwords app, combined with Apple Intelligence and Safari, can now autonomously navigate to a website, sign in, change your weak or compromised password to a strong one, and save the new credential back to the vault all triggered by a single tap. A Live Activity indicator appears on screen so you can see it working, but you don't have to do anything else. The word "agentic" is doing a lot of work right now in the industry, often covering vague multi-step demos that never quite ship. Apple's move here is different because it's not broad automation it's surgical. The Passwords app already flagged weak, reused, or breached credentials, so the AI layer had a clearly scoped problem to solve: remove the friction between "you know your password is compromised" and "you actually changed it." That gap was enormous. Most people never close it. The competitive context makes this sharper. Google has been shipping Gemini's agentic features on Galaxy S26 and Pixel devices since early 2026, handling cross-app tasks like ordering food on Uber Eats or booking rides in Lyft broad, flashy, and currently limited to a short list of supported apps. Apple's answer is narrower on paper but arguably lands harder because it touches something every single user has: compromised passwords sitting in a list they've been ignoring for months. What Apple is really doing here is establishing trust in an agentic pattern before asking users to hand over bigger tasks. If your phone can autonomously change your Dropbox password without you watching every click, and nothing goes wrong, you're psychologically a lot more comfortable when it eventually offers to autonomously book a flight or fill out a form. It's the same trick that got people comfortable with Face ID start with something small where the upside is obvious and the downside is contained. The feature ships with iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 27 this autumn, with developer betas available now and public beta expected in July. For the password manager space 1Password, Dashlane, Bitwarden this is a quiet alarm. Apple just made "auto-fix compromised credentials" a native OS feature. Good luck charging $3/month for that. #WWDC26

  • sahilhandapanda
    Sahil Handa (@sahilhandapanda) reported

    I'm convinced this kind of environment-setting is even more important online. The digital equivalent of swapping a cassette in a studio is stopping to go hunt down a file in Dropbox or Drive.

  • LagoonLabsMv
    Lagoon Labs (@LagoonLabsMv) reported

    Dropbox founder Drew Houston is stepping down as CEO, moving to executive chairman. Stock dropped 2.3% on the news. His next move? He's eyeing the AI space - 'credit card alerts for my Cursor token spend.'

  • kelsscarlet
    kelsey (@kelsscarlet) reported

    i knowwwww somebody gotta be down to pay $100 for my dropbox folder w 770 files 👀 mommy needs gas to go to portland for a concert tn

  • rayontrack
    ray🥤 (@rayontrack) reported

    bookmarked, downloaded, screen recorded, emailed, stored in hard drive, uploaded to cloud, archived, backed up, shared via bluetooth, forwarded, copied to usb, saved offline, synced across devices, added to favourites, printed, password protected, compressed into zip, renamed, organised into folders, duplicated, exported, imported, attached to message, sent to recycle bin, restored from backup, converted to pdf, edited, highlighted, annotated, watermarked, uploaded to google drive, uploaded to dropbox, shared through airdrop, linked to notes, tagged, encrypted, burned to cd/dvd, cached, mirrored to another device, uploaded to server, queued for transfer, dragged into archive, pinned, added to reading list, stored on ssd, embedded in document, linked in spreadsheet, previewed, sent to printer queue, recovered from trash, and indexed for search.

  • techsnif
    TechSnif (@techsnif) reported

    Dropbox founder Drew Houston steps down as CEO after 19 years, replaced by SVP Ashraf Alkarmi

  • SIZEplayProduct
    𝙎𝙄𝙕𝙀𝙥𝙡𝙖𝙮 (@SIZEplayProduct) reported

    Update: I was able to upload a clip via Dropbox to C4S using another Mac - maybe it has something to do with my MacBook? Even though it’s a few years old & has the latest software? Is anyone else having upload issues with #Clips4Sale?

  • 0xlelouch_
    Abhishek Singh (@0xlelouch_) reported

    Interviewer: design Dropbox file sync. I paused and asked what they meant by sync. Whole product? Or just the client protocol? Single user? Team shares? Offline edits? Large files? Mobile on spotty networks? End to end encryption? What’s the SLO for conflict rate and time to converge? Once we scoped it to single-user sync across devices with offline support, I wrote requirements: detect changes, upload deltas, download updates, handle conflicts, resumable transfers, and don’t melt the battery. Non-goals: shared folders and fine-grained permissions. APIs and data model next. I used a file ID stable across renames, plus per-file version and per-device cursor. Client calls: /changes?cursor=..., /upload_session/start, /upload_session/append, /upload_session/commit, /download?file_id&version, /ack?cursor. Server tables: file_metadata(file_id, user_id, path, type, size, content_hash, current_version), file_versions(file_id, version, blob_ref, created_at), device_state(device_id, user_id, last_cursor), and an append-only changelog(user_id, seq, file_id, version, op). Architecture: client has a watcher, a local state DB, and a sync loop. It batches changes, computes chunk hashes, uploads missing chunks, then commits a new version. Server side: metadata service, blob store (chunked, content-addressed), and a per-user change log that devices long-poll or stream. Push notifications help, but the cursor-based pull is the truth. Scaling: shard by user_id for metadata + changelog, store blobs in object storage, cache hot metadata, and keep uploads on pre-signed URLs so the metadata tier doesn’t become the data plane. Chunking makes big files resumable and dedupe-friendly, but it adds CPU and more metadata reads. Tradeoffs I called out: last-writer-wins is simple but loses intent; per-file version vectors are heavier but reduce false conflicts. Chunk size is a fight: 4MB reduces round trips, 1MB retries faster on bad networks. Long-polling is cheaper than WebSockets at scale but slower to react. Failure cases: client crashes mid-upload, so upload sessions must be idempotent and garbage-collected. Network ***** cause retry storms, so exponential backoff + jitter and server-side rate limits. Two devices edit offline, so create conflicted copies and surface it in the client. Silent data corruption, so verify hashes on every download and run background repair. Rename vs edit races, so operations are applied against file_id, not path, and changelog ordering is per user, not global

  • BlakeHer_on
    Blake Heron (@BlakeHer_on) reported

    @StartupArchive_ the dropbox and uber examples are the tell. scratch your own itch, ship the fix, discover a million people had the same itch.

  • 11B_GWG
    11B_geek_w_gun (@11B_GWG) reported

    @wtfcetialpha5 @sarahadams @Dropbox I'd argue a self-hosted ssh server and DDNS service is more "free" depending on your technical ability to setup. But there are advantages to Proton Drive. Both are viable solutions.

  • siddqamar_ai
    Siddiqui Qamar ֎ (@siddqamar_ai) reported

    "it's just a wrapper" 😑 might be one of the laziest criticism in tech! users don't care whether you built the infrastructure. they care whether the product solves their problem. dropbox didn't invent storage. it made storage effortless. turns out making existing technology usable is a lot more valuable than many founders want to admit.

  • itsharmanjot
    Harman (@itsharmanjot) reported

    Open source NotebookLM alternative with no data limits and AI agents. Same idea as Google's NotebookLM. Same chat-with-your-docs. Same podcast generator. Same cited answers. Except this one has no source limit, no notebook limit, no 200MB file cap, and no Google login. It's called SurfSense. Google NotebookLM vs SurfSense: - Sources per notebook: 50 to 600 → Unlimited - File size cap: 200MB and 500K words → No limit - LLM choice: Gemini only → 100+ models via LiteLLM - Local LLMs: Not allowed → Full Ollama and vLLM support - Self-host: No → Yes, one Docker command - Price: $0, $19.99/mo Pro, or $249.99/mo Ultra → $0 forever Here's the wildest part: It connects to 27+ sources Google can't touch. Notion. Slack. Linear. Jira. GitHub. Discord. Dropbox. OneDrive. Gmail. Confluence. Obsidian. ClickUp. Microsoft Teams. Airtable. Your entire work life, indexed once, searchable from one chat box. 14.4K GitHub stars. 1.4K forks. 6,232 commits. Apache-2.0 license. One honest note: the README says it's not yet production-ready and still being actively developed. But it already does more than NotebookLM does, and the gap is widening every release. This is what NotebookLM should have been from the start. Repo in the first comment.

  • besosprincessa
    lonesome cowgirl lex (@besosprincessa) reported

    Who is down to add to their Dropbox link? 👀👀👀 shoot me a message with your budget and want you wanna see!!

  • AnnaBubblyMV
    Anna Bubbly 🌺✨ (@AnnaBubblyMV) reported

    Is uploading on Clips4Sale not working for anyone else? I can only get it to work if I do it through Dropbox, the usual upload button isn’t working

  • ascaIons
    m ⋆。°✩ (@ascaIons) reported

    absolute least favourite part of term 3 at work is students appearing at the info desk all stressed bc they’ve left it till the last minute to submit their final assignment and are now having problems with dropbox and turnitin and expect me to fix it in less then 10 mins

  • lukmanAufbau
    Lukman Aufbau (@lukmanAufbau) reported

    Dropbox tried paid ads first. Expensive. Low conversion. Stopped. Then built distribution into the product. 3,900% growth. Lesson: Test channels. Kill what doesn't pull. Double down on what does naturally.

  • CwealthSentinel
    Commonwealth Sentinel (@CwealthSentinel) reported

    Intruders spent five months inside a stock exchange executive's email, copying it out slowly and hiding in normal Dropbox and OneDrive traffic. No software flaw, so no patch could fix it. When there is nothing to patch, watching is the defense. Know what normal looks like.

  • pelicartza
    Pelicart (@pelicartza) reported

    @lukey_stephens @_avdept real also - dropbox??? why would you pay $5 and not just set up an sftp server

  • AdrienMatray
    Adrien Matray (@AdrienMatray) reported

    The trap: when ~/.claude/ is in Dropbox, it often seems to work. No error message. Sometimes your preferences load, sometimes they do not. The symptom is silent quality drops you cannot trace. Not a visible failure. That is why people miss it.

  • Aiagent_s
    YC Insights. (@Aiagent_s) reported

    He spent two years looking for a bigger problem. Found it on a Chinatown bus in January 2007 when he reached into his bag and realized he'd forgotten his USB drive. Again. He opened his laptop and started coding what would become Dropbox.

  • mcuban
    Mark Cuban (@mcuban) reported

    @pvpandroids Just like box and Dropbox and Google gave away free storage and uber sold rides at a loss. It’s a competitive issue to start. At some point they will.

  • ce_aj100
    AJ (@ce_aj100) reported

    @SsharmaKirti Maybe isse ek project bnalo... redundant file storage ( across various apps like dropbox, gdrive and local server ). And add video streaming capabilities based on the fastest avalable ( calculated dynamically ) service. I made this couple of years ago, but for different tasks

  • 0xPrajwal_
    Prajwal (@0xPrajwal_) reported

    The next time you say, "Python is too slow," remember: Netflix uses Python. Google uses Python. Anthropic uses Python. Meta uses Python. xAI uses Python. Perplexity uses Python. DeepSeek uses Python. Instagram uses Python. Spotify uses Python. Dropbox uses Python. Reddit uses Python. Pinterest uses Python. Uber uses Python. Airbnb uses Python. Quora uses Python. But yeah... it's apparently too slow for your todo app.