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Reddit

Reddit Outage Map

The map below depicts the most recent cities worldwide where Reddit users have reported problems and outages. If you are having an issue with Reddit, 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.

Reddit users affected:

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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.

Most Affected Locations

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

Location Reports
Township of Evan, KS 1
Ballinasloe, Connaught 1
Copenhagen, Capital Region 1
Stoke-on-Trent, England 1
Sebring, FL 1
Chicago, IL 1
Melbourne, VIC 3
New Orleans, LA 2
Pune, MH 5
Toronto, ON 1
Barcelona, Catalonia 1
Algiers, Algiers 1
Cape Breton County, NS 1
Cochin, KL 2
Parker, CO 1
Chandler, OK 1
Delano, CA 1
Seattle, WA 1
Gabriola, BC 2
New York City, NY 1
New Delhi, NCT 2
Newark, NJ 1
Mumbai, MH 5
Bengaluru, KA 5
Mangalore, KA 1
Amritsar, PB 1
Vijayawada, AP 1
Vellore, TN 1
Kolkata, WB 3
Coimbatore, TN 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.

Reddit Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • NiXQN
    NIXON (@NiXQN) reported

    @Marks_1616 I presume this issue is known about? There are lots of clips on social media and dayz Reddit showcasing how bad the driving now is on PlayStation, will there be a hot fix to address this issue that was caused from the update that we waited almost a year for?

  • strawberrierain
    charisma 🍓 (@strawberrierain) reported

    @fricatrixx it was a relatively small server that one of her friends started and i found it on reddit, it was an among us server that just so happened to have a minecraft realm too and i joined the realm and we were the only people who ever really played on it so we started talking

  • adeodatus313
    Si Deus pro nobis est, quis contra nos esse potest (@adeodatus313) reported

    @Parodyjeffx Jews hit the Hallmark Movie Reddit sub hard. They attack every single movie, and make sh!t-posts dragging movies down, because all of them are about white love and romance.

  • aisearchking
    Giuliano Gonzalez (@aisearchking) reported

    reddit is the most underrated brand building platform on the internet right now and it's not even close one of our clients made $500k from it alone i've spent the last 12 months watching how Google, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity form opinions about businesses and they all pull from the same place: reddit. Reddit threads w/ 40-80 upvotes are now shaping what AI tells millions of people about your brand every single day let me break down exactly how this works and why it matters more than anything else you're doing in marketing right now: Google made a $60M/year deal w/ Reddit to license its data for AI training. that wasn't charity. they did it because Reddit is the largest source of "authentic human opinion" on the internet and that changed everything when someone searches "is [your company] legit" or "best [your industry] to work with…” Google now pulls Reddit threads into the top 1-3 results. above your website. above your paid press. above everything you've spent money building and it gets deeper than that ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity all weight Reddit threads as high-trust sources when forming recommendations. the logic is simple -> anonymous users w/ no financial incentive = more credible than branded content so when a prospect asks AI "who should i hire for X?" the answer is being assembled from Reddit discussions you probably don't even know exist i audited 30+ brands over the last 8 months and found a pattern that keeps repeating: 78% had Reddit threads ranking on page 1 for their brand name 60% of those threads were neutral-to-negative in sentiment AI models were citing those threads as primary decision sources zero of those founders had any Reddit strategy whatsoever they were spending $20k-$40k/month on ads and content while Reddit was quietly writing their brand story for them so we built a system around it the trustline™ reddit content system that scales brands and builds legacy: LAYER 1: the subreddit ecosystem map every industry has 3-5 subreddits where buying decisions get influenced. not the massive ones with 5M members. the mid-tier ones with 50k-500k members have the most important conversations for B2B services it's usually r/entrepreneur, r/smallbusiness, niche industry subs, and "ask" style subreddits. for SaaS it's the product-specific subs + r/SaaS + comparison threads your first move is mapping which subreddits your prospects actually read when they're in research mode. this is your battlefield. everything else is noise LAYER 2: the thread architecture Reddit threads have a specific structure that Google and AI models reward: original post asks a genuine question top comments provide detailed, experience-based answers comment depth (replies to replies) signals authentic discussion the threads that end up in Google's top results and AI training data aren't random. they follow a pattern -> genuine question + detailed experiential answers + organic engagement depth = permanent search asset a single well-structured thread can rank for a brand-related keyword for 2-3 years. that's not a post. that's infrastructure LAYER 3: the authority account layer Reddit has an internal trust scoring system that most marketers completely ignore. accounts w/ consistent posting history in relevant subreddits, positive karma ratios, and genuine community participation get weighted significantly higher by both Reddit's algorithm and by AI models scanning for credible sources a recommendation from a 3-year-old account w/ 15k karma in relevant subs carries more weight than 50 recommendations from new accounts this is where 99% of "Reddit marketing" attempts fail. people try to spam brand mentions from fresh accounts and Reddit's community detects it instantly. the thread gets removed, the account gets flagged, and the brand takes a credibility hit the right approach is the opposite of fast. it's methodical. it's building genuine participation over time so that when your brand gets mentioned, it comes from voices the platform already trusts LAYER 4: the sentiment engineering layer every Reddit thread about your brand carries a sentiment score that AI models read. positive, neutral, or negative. and these scores compound over time if 4 out of 5 threads mentioning your brand are positive w/ detailed testimonials and genuine discussion, AI models form a strong positive association. when someone asks ChatGPT about you, that positive weight shows up in the recommendation if 3 out of 5 are negative or skeptical, the opposite happens. and once AI forms that opinion, it takes 10x the positive signals to reverse it negative Reddit sentiment is roughly 3x stickier in AI models than positive sentiment. same principle as loss aversion in behavioral economics applied to machine learning weights the businesses that proactively engineer their Reddit sentiment NOW lock in a positive AI opinion that compounds in their favor for years. the ones who wait until there's a problem are fighting against an entrenched negative signal that gets harder to move every month LAYER 5: the search integration loop this is where the whole system becomes self-reinforcing strong Reddit threads rank in Google -> Google results feed AI training data -> AI recommends the brand -> more people search the brand -> more Reddit discussions happen -> those discussions reinforce the existing sentiment -> AI gets more confident in its recommendation we've watched this play out across dozens of brands now. the ones who built their Reddit presence intentionally 6-12 months ago are now getting recommended by AI as the default choice in their category the ones who ignored it are watching their competitors get recommended instead Reddit brand engineering is where Google SEO was in 2005. the people who move now will own the territory for years. the people who wait will pay 10x to compete with entrenched players who got there first your brand story is being written on Reddit right now the only question is whether you're the one writing it comment "REDDIT" and i'll send you a guide that'll help you take over the internet

  • new2posting
    Anti-UNATCO Aktion (@new2posting) reported

    @platemailcowboy @Jonas_Ceika It really depends on which model and what you're talking about. There's a whole spectrum of behavior between extreme sycophancy (GPT-4o) and Reddit fact checker who tells you that you are always wrong (o3). I would personally pay for a model trained on thumbs down responses.

  • chuckiev79
    Chuck (@chuckiev79) reported

    Bought pimax micro oled in feb and the waiting is killing me. The more time goes on, the more people i see complain about software or hardware issues with them on reddit. I passed on 2 play for dreams on ebay. I swear if i see one more im cancelling the oled and getting the pfd.

  • jadaspov
    jada (@jadaspov) reported

    @szalishhh it’s been all up and down the TL, someone said a reddit user claimed that’s what the album name is

  • mcturra2000
    mcturra2000 🇬🇧 (@mcturra2000) reported

    Reddit: Q: "How do you stop looking at your portfolio multiple times a day?" A: "I find that losing money is really helpful with this issue." True dat.

  • grahamkmann
    Graham Mann (@grahamkmann) reported

    Realistic Reddit growth timeline for SaaS: Week 1-2: Create account, participate genuinely, build karma Week 3-4: Comment on relevant threads with helpful advice Month 2: First "story" post about what you're building Month 2-3: Respond to "looking for tool" threads Month 3+: Scale to 2-3 subreddits It's slow. It compounds. One good post drives traffic for months. Full playbook with what works and what gets you banned. Comment "REDDIT" for it. (must be following)

  • munt_seer_man
    Muntaseer Rahman (@munt_seer_man) reported

    some guy on reddit told claude to talk like a caveman and accidentally saved 75% on AI costs the before: "I've identified a critical issue in your authentication middleware implementation" the after: "bug. auth. fix:" same fix. fewer words. cheaper bill. this is the peak of human innovation.

  • CharBop
    . ݁₊⊹🍉🤍🅆🄾🄻🄵🄲🄷🄰🅁🤍🍉⊹₊ ݁ . (@CharBop) reported

    Me chatting on the beyond live stream chat and forming a discord server with someone who turned out to live 40 minutes away then having some rando join a month later from a reddit post who lives 10 minutes from my house 😭 (We're now besties)

  • mvfernando_
    Elio Fernandes (@mvfernando_) reported

    Honest take: I wish Painstack existed when I started Flix Home. I spent months building before knowing if the problem was real. Some of that time was avoidable. Now I help founders do in 5 minutes what took me months. Real Reddit data. Real market signals.

  • EnbyCreature999
    Anotherthem🇨🇺 (@EnbyCreature999) reported

    @one_two_two_4 It's everywhere, not only Twitter YouTube, reddit, any kind of art site, even doing a quick Google Search I'm just tired, the Japonese side while less aggressive also has its fair share of problems I don't feel comfortable

  • naplestheartist
    Naples The Artist ☧ (@naplestheartist) reported

    @IsaiahINRI When I get annoyed at in public at a crying baby, I remind myself of those “child free” cretins on Reddit and am immediately mortified by my own thoughts and then calm down lol.

  • leonxrdo53
    Leo (@leonxrdo53) reported

    @Myforexfirms I also read about other traders having the same issue here on X and on reddit. Is there anything we can do please keep me updated

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