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GitHub

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
Trichūr, KL 1
Brasília, DF 2
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
Gustavo Adolfo Madero, CDMX 1
Nice, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 1
Montataire, Hauts-de-France 3
Colima, COL 1
Poblete, Castille-La Mancha 1
Ronda, Andalusia 1
Hernani, Basque Country 1
Tortosa, Catalonia 1
Culiacán, SIN 1
Haarlem, nh 1
Villemomble, Île-de-France 1
Bordeaux, Nouvelle-Aquitaine 1
Ingolstadt, Bavaria 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:

  • slicknet
    Nicholas C. Zakas (@slicknet) reported

    @github QuickStart guide link is broken

  • declarative_
    clara.tie(nullptr); (@declarative_) reported

    it feels so broken that nixpkgs is hosted on github. i never want to hit a rate limit when updating my computer ever again

  • bluehatone
    bluehatone (@bluehatone) reported

    Stop one giant bot. Hire small AI employees with one job in Hermes. Route tasks in Slack, Telegram, WhatsApp. Run on local, Docker, SSH, Singularity, Modal, or Daytona. Security AI runs pip audit and npm audit, files GitHub issues. Not magic. Measure results.

  • donqrakko
    Kuruś (@donqrakko) reported

    @HermesAgentTips @Teknium 1/2 @Teknium please fix hermes desktop for windows. I don't have time to create issue on github 1. I get error - *** not installed, but i have latest version of *** 2. I noticed hermes and hermes desktop is almost 3gb od size. So i got angry and tried to uninstall it

  • TheUltronAi
    Ultron AI (@TheUltronAi) reported

    I deleted my Kayak bookmark this morning. Someone built a free MCP server that hooks Claude directly into Google Flights, and it makes every other flight search tool feel slow. It's called fli. The thing that makes it different from every other flight library on GitHub is the architecture. No web scraping. No headless browser. No HTML parsing. The developer reverse-engineered Google Flights' actual internal API. fli talks to it directly. That's why results come back in milliseconds instead of seconds, and why it doesn't break every time Google ships a UI update. You type "find me a non-stop business class flight from JFK to LHR next Tuesday under 8 hours" into Claude. Claude calls the tool. The tool hits Google's API. Results stream back into your chat in real time.

  • 1rakeshB
    Rakesh (@1rakeshB) reported

    401 was indeed a misleading response , unusual behavior for an API, when the underlying system is broken. @github kind requests to provide some insight to help learn from these incidents.

  • kennylamoot
    Kenny Lamoot (@kennylamoot) reported

    What's your number? I compact my Claude Code sessions around 400K, long before the 1M window is full. The quality of the answers drops gradually past that point, the model gets more generic and forgets constraints I set earlier. This week I found a GitHub issue where the model itself recommended a restart at 48% of the window. So the instinct was not just mine.

  • MaheshCodesX
    Mahesh Nandigam (@MaheshCodesX) reported

    The Sourcing Loop Most tech recruiters in India have never written a single line of production code. Yet they are the gatekeepers deciding whether a senior systems architect gets hired. Let that sink in. This is why our hiring system is a complete joke. I watched a developer friend of mine get rejected this week. He is a solid builder. He understands database indexing, query optimization, and memory management. But he was auto-rejected by a keyword scanner managed by someone who doesn't know the difference between Java and Javascript. Meanwhile, a vibe coder who copy-pastes Next.js templates from YouTube tutorials gets a shortlist. Because his resume is stuffed with the exact buzzwords the bot was looking for. We have turned hiring into a game of resume SEO. We are no longer testing engineering. We are testing who is better at pretending. If you are a developer from a tier-3 college, you know exactly what I am talking about. Your college placement cell treats a 3.5 LPA support job like they just funded SpaceX. You dress up in formals that don't fit. You take aptitude tests about trains passing poles. And if you actually build unique systems in your hostel room, nobody cares. Because you don't fit the template. It is a tragedy for talent. And it is a disaster for startup founders who end up hiring people who can prompt, but cannot debug when the production database breaks at 3 AM. I was tired of watching this cycle repeat. So I spent a week testing how we can break this loop. I wanted to see if modern AI hiring tools are just generic wrappers, or if someone is actually solving this. I looked at how a new AI-native talent platform is approaching it. Most AI tools just throw your resume into a giant, slow, expensive frontier LLM. Which is like using a rocket ship to go to the grocery store. It makes no sense. They did something different. They built their own custom 2-billion parameter model (a custom 2B model). It runs with an ultra-low latency of under 50 milliseconds. It doesn't look for keyword formatting. It evaluates the actual complexity of your GitHub repositories and projects. It matches by technical intent. If you know how to build a distributed system, it ranks you high, even if your resume format is terrible. It bypasses the human bias and the keyword games entirely. This is the shift from "typing syntax" to "architecting systems." I wrote a long-form, unfiltered breakdown of this shift on LinkedIn. I talked about why the resume era is officially dead. How this 2B model architecture works. And how developers can optimize their portfolios for semantic AI search. The debate is currently blowing up on my page. Recruiters are defending their workflow, and developers are sharing their worst horror stories. Let's see what Felix Kim and his team have to say about this. If you want to read the breakdown and join the discussion: 👇 **Reply "BYPASS" below, and I will DM you the direct LinkedIn Post link immediately!** Those who know, know.

  • XadenRyan
    Xaden Ryan (@XadenRyan) reported

    @jxnlco The computer use process is completely broken and corrupted. There are two issues open with hundreds of comments on it in github. Please fix it.

  • z_zmag8
    Zee 💌 Holofunk arc (@z_zmag8) reported

    @hachapurr Was told earlier that someone who i believe was in that funkin github server or like whatever asked hundrec about that stuff and apparently thats what they said Tho lowk I was alr mentally exhausted today so I kinda was maybe tweaking a little bit

  • bigaiguy
    Spencer Baggins (@bigaiguy) reported

    A 21-year-old computer science student in Helsinki bought his first PC in early 1991 and immediately hated the operating system it came with. So he sat down to write his own. On September 25, 1991 he posted a quiet message to a Usenet newsgroup announcing what he called "just a hobby, won't be big and professional like GNU." 35 years later that hobby runs every Android phone on Earth, every supercomputer on the TOP500 list, the entire backend of the internet, the International Space Station, and SpaceX's Falcon rockets. His name is Linus Torvalds. The hobby is called Linux. Here is the story, because the man who runs the most consequential codebase in human history almost no longer needs an introduction inside engineering and still walks the streets unrecognized everywhere else. Linus was born in Helsinki, Finland on December 28, 1969. He was named after Linus Pauling, the only person in history to win two unshared Nobel Prizes, in Chemistry and in Peace. He joked he might also be partly named after Linus van Pelt from the Peanuts cartoon. His family was unusual. Both parents were journalists. His grandfather was a statistician. Another grandfather was a poet. The family belonged to Finland's Swedish-speaking minority. There are fewer than 30 people in the world with the surname Torvalds, and according to Linus, they are all related. At 10 he started programming on his grandfather's Commodore VIC-20. By his teenage years he was writing his own assemblers, editors, and games. He served in the Finnish Army for his mandatory national service and rose to the rank of Second Lieutenant. Then he enrolled at the University of Helsinki to study computer science. In early 1991 he bought a personal computer with MS-DOS and disliked it intensely. He wanted UNIX, the operating system he had used at the university. UNIX cost thousands of dollars. He could not afford it. So he started writing his own. He posted the now-famous announcement to comp.os.minix in August 1991. He called the kernel Linux, a portmanteau of his name and MINIX. He released the source code under the GPL license. Anyone could download it, read it, modify it, and ship it for free. Within a year hundreds of developers around the world were sending him patches. Within five years Linux was running web servers. Within ten years it had taken over the supercomputer market. Within twenty years it was running on most of the internet. Today every Android phone on Earth runs the Linux kernel. Every Chromebook runs Linux. Most of AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure runs Linux. Every Tesla runs Linux. Every SpaceX Falcon 9 and Dragon capsule runs Linux. The International Space Station runs Linux. Every supercomputer in the world's TOP500 list runs Linux. That was the first thing he built. In 2005 the proprietary version control system the Linux community had been using, BitKeeper, revoked its free license. Linus was furious. He sat down and wrote a replacement in 10 days. He called it ***. The first commit was on April 7, 2005. Today *** powers GitHub, GitLab, and the source control of every major software organization on Earth. Every line of code at OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Meta, and Microsoft flows through ***. Every AI model on the planet is versioned with software a Finnish engineer wrote in less than two weeks. He won the 2012 Millennium Technology Prize, the equivalent of a Nobel Prize for engineering. He won the IEEE Computer Pioneer Award in 2014. He completed his master's degree from Helsinki along the way, with a thesis titled "Linux: A Portable Operating System." He moved to the United States, became a citizen, and now works from his home in Portland, Oregon, employed by the Linux Foundation. A Finnish student announced a hobby project on a message board in 1991. His code is now in every pocket on the planet. He still writes most of his important communication on the Linux kernel mailing list.

  • tslaming
    Ming (@tslaming) reported

    @Squirrel1980021 That is usually the biggest catch with custom solutions, as proprietary protocols often fragment the industry and lock people in. However, the great news here is that Tesla actually open-sourced it to prevent exactly that. They released the entire specification as TTPoE on GitHub during HotChips 2024 and even joined the Ultra Ethernet Consortium. So instead of keeping it locked down as a proprietary secret, they are actively working to make it an open standard that the entire high-performance computing ecosystem can use and build upon.

  • MyNamesGuy
    Yep my name is Guy 😊🌸🥕 (@MyNamesGuy) reported

    @JamesWard Github Copilot failed my code review today and suggested both one change that would break the stored procedure and another change that was syntactically completely in error. It was so awful that I was wondering whether the LLM had been poisoned.

  • SlykePhoxenix
    Slyke 🇦🇺 🇨🇦 (@SlykePhoxenix) reported

    @romainhuet Can you guys fix the Codex app so it doesn't keep breaking? Or give us the ability to just download the binary from github so we can choose our own version? Every week an update is forced down that breaks WSL2, Codex, or some random functionality with no way to fix. It's just not worth $100/mo when this happens on a weekly basis. Strongly considering to just use Claude $100/mo at this point - it's endless frustration on Codex.

  • sharmaa__12
    Reeya (@sharmaa__12) reported

    Mistake in RESUME !!!! 📩 I review 100s of resumes daily, and I need to clear up one basic formatting mistake I keep seeing on recent applications. Many candidates are now hyperlinking their email IDs or setting up their phone numbers so that clicking them automatically triggers a laptop’s calling app or mail client. You might think adding these interactive elements makes your resume look tech-savvy and "cool” In reality? It just makes an HRs or Referres job harder. No recruiter is ever going to click your resume to call you directly from their laptop or send a standalone email straight from a PDF. It is fed into an ATS (Applicant Tracking System) which automatically parses and extracts your text data into our internal database. Complex hyperlinks can sometimes break this parsing, causing formatting errors. If you want to use hyperlinks, save them for the right places. Do link your portfolio, GitHub, or LinkedIn profile. But leave your email and phone number as plain, unlinked text.

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