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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
Indio, CA 1
Rosenau, ACAL 1
Pélissanne, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 2
Adelaide, SA 1
Brisbane, QLD 1
Bengaluru, KA 2
Dhaka, Dhaka 1
Foligno, Umbria 1
Odessa, FL 1
Guayaquil, Guayas 1
Atlanta, GA 1
Helsinki, Uusimaa 1
Lübeck, Hansestadt, Schleswig-Holstein 1
Craiova, Dolj 1
Nanaimo, BC 1
Chicago, IL 1
Pāhoa, HI 1
Pittsboro, NC 1
Buffalo, NY 1
Minneapolis, MN 1
Ocala, FL 1
The Hague, zh 1
London, England 1
Round Rock, TX 1
Amman, Amman 1
Beauvais, Hauts-de-France 1
Pune, MH 4
Township of Norwood Park, IL 1
Stockholm, Stockholm 1
Manchester, England 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:

  • GoldenKazeX
    GoldenKazeX (@GoldenKazeX) reported

    @reddit_lies Reddit will talk about an issue but they'll never actually do something to fix if

  • glitchshay
    glitché 🏆 (@glitchshay) reported

    GIGI MURIN OF HOLOLIVE ENGLISH JUSTICE FAME PLEASE STOP REFERENCING THE BROKEN ARMS ****** REDDIT STORY😭😭😭😭

  • NainsiDwiv50980
    Nainsi Dwivedi (@NainsiDwiv50980) reported

    Most people install Claude. A few people build a system around it. That's where the gap starts. The weird thing about Claude Projects is that they're deceptively simple. You create a Project. Upload a few files. Add some instructions. And it feels like you've understood the feature. I thought the same thing. Then I started seeing people getting outputs that were dramatically better than mine. Not 10% better. Not "slightly cleaner." I'm talking about work that felt like it came from an entirely different model. Same Claude. Completely different results. After digging through dozens of Reddit threads, creator workflows, power-user setups, and making most of the mistakes myself, I realized something: The people getting the most out of Claude aren't better prompters. They're better at structuring Projects. A few examples: → They don't rely on custom styles for consistency. Everything important lives in Project instructions. → They aggressively remove outdated knowledge files instead of letting stale context quietly degrade answers. → They start fresh chats far more often than you'd expect instead of dragging around 200-message conversations. → They use Sonnet for almost everything and save Opus for work that genuinely needs it. → They explicitly tell Claude to say "I don't know" instead of rewarding confident guessing. → They separate Projects by objective instead of throwing everything into one giant workspace. → They upload examples of their own writing instead of typing "write like me." → They understand context doesn't magically transfer between Projects. None of these tips are groundbreaking on their own. That's what makes them dangerous. They're small enough to ignore. But together they completely change how Claude behaves. I turned the biggest lessons into a visual cheat sheet because I wish someone had handed this to me on day one. Would've saved me weeks of trial and error. If you're already using Claude daily, you'll probably recognize at least one mistake you're still making

  • LJ_gn8
    gn८ (@LJ_gn8) reported

    Morphe has helped me fix youtube and reddit. Now I'm hoping for twitter please

  • AlOmariInc
    Abdelrahman Al Omari (@AlOmariInc) reported

    the least impressive part of my product is the part that actually works. leadsynth doesn't blast messages from one central server. every reply goes out from the user's own account, their own session, at human pace — one at a time, across reddit/x/linkedin/youtube. blasting it all through a single API would've been 10x easier to build and demo. it also would've gotten every account flagged inside a week. so i ate the slow version. 686 accounts, each its own real session. 27,178 conversations sent. 0 spam complaints. the boring infra is the whole moat. the clever shortcut would've been dead on arrival. founders — what's the unglamorous decision in your stack that quietly holds the whole thing up?

  • 1atheistcat
    Cathy #ProtectChoice#Equality (@1atheistcat) reported

    @RealPostFolder What a horrible human being—did a man write this crap? No woman would do this, let alone admit it on Reddit, let alone ask how to fix things. I doubt this is real, but if she’s that broken, he can’t fix it, so why on earth would he stay?

  • Pyruuuuuu
    Pyruuu 👧🍵🗿🔨➡️AX & Serendipity🩷💛🩵 (@Pyruuuuuu) reported

    @JCONvt @glitchshay An infamous reddit ama about a guy who broke both of his arms when he was a teen and because he was very moody his mother decided he needed some stress relief, and then it continued. Easy to find if you search "2 broken arms reddit"

  • read_jfk_files
    JFK Files (@read_jfk_files) reported

    🤔 it always stuck in my mind for some reason. there was an old line from a Snowden file where NSA boasted about how they always think in terms of "do the impossible" and that's how they stay far ahead of everyone else because nobody can even think about what they are doing. how can you defend against technology you don't know exists? it's like fighting a ghost. how could you take down the Starlink weapon system without triggering Kessler syndrome? i like this idea posted on Reddit because it is a big idea, it sounds technically impossible and it requires such a huge scale that is bigger than the thing it attacks. this follows a principle similar to "the Bitter Lesson", but for weapons instead of data/AI. How do you take down 20,000+ small satellites which are the size of a couch? Easy, sorta. you deploy 40,000 smaller satellites the size of a microwave, which have grabber arms, they grab the Starlinks, then fire their small boosters and force the Starlinks down towards the Earth. this avoids the catastrophe of explosions in space and filling all the orbital planes with microscopic debris moving 17,000mph, like a giant metal shredder that makes going into orbit become impossible. i bet Starlink doesn't even have a defense against this type of attack because this is such a ridiculous engineering problem that nobody would believe it might be possible. i bet it is possible. but the only way it would work is a non-US country will need to clone SpaceX's re-usable rockets to make it scale. China is already pretty close. so the Starlink head start door closes in about 2-5 years.

  • majiyoroshikuu
    mimi | is in love with naoya 🔔🩵 (@majiyoroshikuu) reported

    “Oh I asked chatgpt” what a loser look it up on Reddit where someone probably asked the same question 7 years ago you slimy chud. Look it up on a proper browser. Read a book. Or, maybe unfathomable to some, you could use your own thinking and problem solving skills!

  • TheBigBerbowski
    TheBigBerbowski (@TheBigBerbowski) reported

    @napoleon21st @Gubloinvestor You're conflating substack and pumps and dumps mate like it's part of the bigger scamming scheme. As long as people share authentic research, be it on substack, reddit, you name it, I don't think it's a problem. I wouldn't judge you based on $2 or $20 sub price, but based on the content you share.

  • thewilliamrb
    William (@thewilliamrb) reported

    How I use Claude to find content ideas my buyers care about: 1. I DON'T GUESS WHAT THEY CARE ABOUT I go pull their actual words and phrasing. From reddit threads, the comments on the big accounts they follow, my own DMs and replies, the reviews they leave. This is raw material. Their words, not my assumptions about what they want. 2. FEED IT TO CLAUDE The problems that keep coming up, and the exact phrases people use to describe them. Claude will read all of it and pull out what gets said over and over. 3. I DECIDE WHAT TO USE Claude surfaces everything, including a lot of low-stakes complaining. I pull out the burning ones, the problems people are genuinely frustrated by. These are the most potent content ideas. The general complaints make posts nobody reacts to, and telling them apart is something Claude can't do reliably for me. Every idea that comes out of this is something a real buyer already cared enough to bring up.

  • KettleworksSFW
    Kettleverse Daily (@KettleworksSFW) reported

    @SheeGee This isn't reddit you ******* quango. You don't get to red marker someone's image and you're suddenly in the right. Why don't you stop traveling and use that fly money to fix that absolute ******** of a city you call home.

  • alt_tgbwears
    DR-TGb🏄🏿‍♂️-iSellWears🇵🇹🇫🇷🇳🇴🇧🇷 (@alt_tgbwears) reported

    @TheBoykayy I Dey even see less self, sub 160 Most people are on the lease, 299 a month for standard model 3, 1700 down and 0% APR Be like na just offer for a while Good deal from what I read on Reddit

  • lifescaption_ow
    Lifescaption (@lifescaption_ow) reported

    @joshuagrant @OmnivoreWarrior Go through the forums, Reddit, it a handful of posts of you've somehow dodged the bus. There's base UI errors, more cc resulting in lag or disconnects, more add-ons were intentionally broken, but their versions lack defensive/cc information... There's many.

  • mauthe_doog
    Mauthe Doog 👁️ (@mauthe_doog) reported

    After I stopped laughing at the headline and read it, it sounds like they're just going to the mods of the horror short story forums and saying "give me the email of the most popular short story writers here" It's funny because as far as I'm aware, Kane didn't interact with the backrooms reddit and is actually quoted as saying he had "no idea" about the backrooms community when he started his series. It's kinda funny seeing it try to sneakily imply that the success of the backrooms is due to Reddit when you could remove it from the equation entirely and nothing would change. The article is TECHNICALLY not wrong about Reddit helping the communities grow, and says Reddit, Youtube, and Tiktok are where the communities grow. Which is not the full story: Reddit is the easiest to search historical opinions and has the horror short story community mostly now. Reddit functions as a kind of retention layer for long term discussion. A lot of that happens in discords but they're silo'd off so practically useless for any discussion like this. And yes I know "reddit haha" but the horror writers there are pretty good, so it's not the worst idea in the world. Although there are some big examples of tiktok native series doing well (Angel Engine), afaik short form is more used to share analog horror than make it. YouTube is where most of the horror growth is imo, especially for video since the horror analysis/commentary community pulls in MASSIVE numbers that (unfortunately only sometimes) filter down to original creators like Kane. Kane's work is great but I don't think it would be half as popular if other YouTube creators didn't latch onto it.

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