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GitHub Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where GitHub users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with GitHub, make sure to submit a report below

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The heatmap above shows where the most recent user-submitted and social media reports are geographically clustered. The density of these reports is depicted by the color scale as shown below.

GitHub users affected:

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GitHub is a company that provides hosting for software development and version control using Git. It offers the distributed version control and source code management functionality of Git, plus its own features.

Most Affected Locations

Outage reports and issues in the past 15 days originated from:

Location Reports
Mexico City, CDMX 1
León de los Aldama, GUA 1
Créteil, Île-de-France 1
Trichūr, KL 1
Brasília, DF 1
Lyon, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
Tel Aviv, Tel Aviv 1
Rive-de-Gier, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 1
Itapema, SC 1
Cleveland, TN 1
Tlalpan, CDMX 1
Quilmes, BA 1
Bengaluru, KA 1
Yokohama, Kanagawa 1
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Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

GitHub Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • tunahorse21
    tuna🍣 (@tunahorse21) reported

    @jjacky before my current job, i did a lot of consulting as my sidegig, mostly ai glue and devrel for startups a big one is a lack of proper documentation, expecting users to just “get it” is a lack of empathy I think langchain is a perfect example, they had terrible documentation and I spoke to multiple people who got off it due to the terrible docs this was early 2022ish Another is not dog fooding your own product, like the same version your users actually use Lack of clear messaging, again empathy is the point, sending potential users to a outdated site and then being like oh sorry go to this random github link Customer service is one that shocked me how bad everyone was at, had a client, I did a real test with a burner account posing as a enterprise user needing help, and they basically called me stupid and pointed me to outdated docs. This was multi million dollar startup. “all of this is really simple” was the pushback i got back from multiple teams But if it is so simple why isn’t it done perfectly? Anybody can do it for one day, or a few months, can you do it everyday? This actually takes skill and is something nerds struggle with because the tend to tunnel vision

  • Mitali9826
    Mitali Gautam (@Mitali9826) reported

    @NisargBhoi It detects duplicate GitHub issues using dual signal one for natural language and one for code then fuses them for better matching, instead of relying on a single generic embedding like GitHub's current approach Simili (Github's built in detection system)

  • david_y_xiong
    David Xiong (@david_y_xiong) reported

    The ambiguity of turning GitHub Issue text into the exact set of hidden fail_to_pass test cases used to verify your patch makes “resolve rate” very noisy

  • ty_kra_lab
    Tykra (@ty_kra_lab) reported

    With an Apple Developer account and a Cursor subscription, you can vibecode and install fully standalone apps directly on your iPhone. You only need a machine running a private local server. From there, you can build, edit, update, and install any app you want through OTA updates or direct IPA installation. When you are on the same local network, the app can also be installed automatically through the native Xcode installation flow. This is clearly an experimental solution, but the important part is that you do not need GitHub or any external repository to create and prototype native iOS apps. Since the system uses Xcode and Cursor, it can technically build almost anything you want. The most important difference is that the apps are not hosted on a server controlled by a company. They are signed with your own Apple Developer profile and can be used offline. This makes the solution one of the most native ways to build and prototype real iOS apps directly for your iPhone. It creates a bridge between your machine and your phone, making it much closer to a real vibecoding environment than a simple server-based app builder. From my research, this is also one of the only solutions that offers almost endless creation, because it uses Cursor’s agent system and allows you to keep generating, editing, and rebuilding apps without relying on a closed platform or fixed daily limits.

  • CoinSh0t
    Coin Shot ☁️ (@CoinSh0t) reported

    CHINESE STUDENT BUILT AI SPEED TRACKER AND MADE $335K The buyers were the government. They don’t even realize this guy built the device with Claude for $20. Whole trick is on line 9: One engineer working alone in a workshop built a radar that rivals systems costing a quarter of a million dollars. Then he did the exact opposite of hiding it. He published every schematic, circuit board, and line of firmware on GitHub for anyone to copy for free. The project is called AERIS-10, a real phased array radar that tracks the speed and range of moving targets. The extended version reaches up to 20 kilometers on parts that cost a few thousand dollars, against the 250,000 dollars that commercial phased array units command. He described himself as nothing more than an obsessed hobbyist with a soldering iron. There was no secret buyer and no hidden trick, because the whole design is sitting in a public repository. The same pattern holds at the cheap end of speed tracking. A working vehicle speed camera runs on a Raspberry Pi and a camera for around a hundred dollars in parts, using open-source code like pageauc's speed-camera and OpenCV, with the software free. Here is the part the viral versions always cut: → No government issues a fine off a hobby build, because enforcement requires certified and regularly calibrated metrology equipment. → The hard skill is not one clever line of code, it is calibrating the camera against a known speed until the readings actually hold. → The people who genuinely push this field forward give their work away in the open, they do not quietly smuggle a cheap box past a buyer. Real capability gets cheaper every year, and the ones moving it forward tend to publish, not hide. Sources: Tom's Hardware, Hackster, and Hackaday coverage of the AERIS-10 phased array radar by Nawfal Motii; the AERIS-10 GitHub repository; the open-source pageauc speed-camera project.

  • FanBe_web3
    FanBe (@FanBe_web3) reported

    @Cointelegraph GitHub outage delaying a token standard launch is extremely web3 summer 2026

  • B20RWA
    B20 RWA (@B20RWA) reported

    There are some issues with the GitHub files; we will launch the launch once these problems are resolved.

  • hakemer
    Marcin Hakemer-Fernandez (@hakemer) reported

    Codex: build site, push to github. Done Claude Design: build site, send to Claude Code, chat with it forever to get things done. Use multiple sessions (cuz it can't connect without a folder or whatever). Talk it through everything. Can't understand it's own tools. Tells me to do things I shouldn't have to. Etc. etc. Some pro would tell me I didn't do this or that, and it's a user error. I don't care. I'm a beginner and I just want it to be done. Codex just does it, Claude Code is still trying to send the damn thing Github, as I am typing this... 🤦

  • ahmed25s37
    Ahmed Said (@ahmed25s37) reported

    @github @githubsupport My account (formerly ffathy-tdx) was taken over on July 1, password & 2FA changed without my consent, then suspended. I'm a Pro subscriber and can't access the appeal form since I can't sign in. Ticket #4524519 open 7 days, no human response. Please help.

  • Skyb0rg
    Skye Soss (@Skyb0rg) reported

    @grhmc Let’s say you setup a transparency log where you upload your signed commits. This paper shows that an attacker can change the commit in a way that may cause the transparency log to look incorrect. But you’re right this isn’t really a GitHub issue, they’re overselling the “issue”

  • MakanAnsariCG
    Makan Ansari (@MakanAnsariCG) reported

    Google AI Studio is not working good anymore I guess! I asked it to help me to make a link and thumbnail for my GitHub Page and it was giving me wrong results and it stopped working! Mimo on Hermes fixed it for me with one prompt! that's not a good news for Google.

  • Oehliii
    Öhli (@Oehliii) reported

    @ParthJadhav8 hiya parth, do you have noop 8.1 by any chance - the team just took down their website & github, i’m on 8.0.1 sadly i couldnt update anymore :(

  • Kiburei
    Andrew Mwangi (@Kiburei) reported

    @ayesha_fatiima Naisha... then na kumbuka Github suspended my account without explanation. Support's wakanighost Turns out the billion-dollar part isn't storing your code in folders—it's convincing all of us to trust them with our digital lives. Sahii na host my own *** server and CI/CD.

  • AISecHub
    AISecHub (@AISecHub) reported

    Google's AI powered GitHub workflows that allowed any external attacker, with nothing more than a public GitHub issue, to a full supply chain compromise of the gemini-cli repository, Google's AI coding agent with 101,000+ stars. The attack worked in four steps: > The vector. An attacker opens a public Issue on a Google GitHub repository. > The mechanism. Google deployed a Gemini-powered AI agent to read and triage incoming public issues automatically. The attacker hides instructions inside the issue text. When the agent reads the issue, the prompt injection takes control of the agent. > The exploit. Under the attacker's instructions, the Gemini agent extracts the workflow internal secrets from the build environment and exfiltrates them to an attacker-controlled server. From those credentials, the attacker pivots to a token with full write access on the repository. > The impact. Full supply-chain compromise. The attacker can push arbitrary code to the main branch of gemini-cli’s repository, which then ships to every downstream user.

  • heynavtoor
    Nav Toor (@heynavtoor) reported

    Every VHS filter you see on TikTok is a sticker. They slap grain on top of the frame. Shift the colors green. Add a scanline overlay. Call it retro. It looks nothing like an actual tape because none of it is simulating an actual tape. It is decoration painted on a digital video that never touched an analog signal. A developer who goes by valadaptive built the real thing. The tool is called ntsc-rs. It does not overlay anything. It simulates the actual NTSC signal path. The same physics that made your parents' home videos look the way they did. Composite encoding. Luminance and chrominance separation. Color subsampling. Chroma bleed. Ringing. Head switching noise. Tape warping. Tracking errors. Signal dropout. Every artifact modeled from the actual analog chain a broadcast engineer would have wired up in 1988. Your footage ages 30 years in real time. It runs five ways. As a standalone desktop app for Windows, macOS, and Linux. As an After Effects plugin. As a Premiere Pro plugin. As an OpenFX plugin that drops into DaVinci Resolve, Nuke, Vegas Pro, HitFilm, and Natron. As a rewritten multithreaded Rust engine any developer can embed in their own tool. One effect. Every major editor. Zero dollars. Here is what the paid market looks like. Boris FX Continuum single-host annual subscription. $215. Red Giant Universe, the bundle that ships the retro effects. $214 a year. Continuum multi-host. $765 a year. Sapphire multi-host perpetual. $2,795. FilmConvert Nitrate for one host. $139. Adobe Creative Cloud, which you need to even run most of these plugins. $22.99 a month. ntsc-rs. Zero. The core engine is triple-licensed under Apache 2.0, ISC, and MIT so any studio or plugin developer can drop it into a commercial pipeline without asking. The standalone application is GPL-3.0 so nobody can rebrand it and sell it back to you. Permissive at the engine level. Copyleft at the app level. The design of someone who read the room. The latest release did 53,000 downloads. 2,362 GitHub stars. Windows, macOS, and Linux builds all shipped. Here is the punchline. Engineers spent 40 years building digital video to escape analog imperfections. Now the entire creator economy pays between $139 and $2,795 a year to put them back. One developer wrote the physics in Rust and released it for free. (Link in the comments)

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