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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
Douai, Hauts-de-France 1
Olathe, KS 1
Da Nang, Da Nang 1
Chhindwāra, MP 1
Puteaux, Île-de-France 1
New Delhi, NCT 1
Paris, Île-de-France 1
Vigo, Galicia 1
Phoenix, AZ 1
Lima, Lima 1
Indio, CA 1
Rosenau, ACAL 1
Pélissanne, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur 1
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
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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:

  • SiMBa37
    Nerderiffic (@SiMBa37) reported

    @amtrusova Reddit is broken. Bans are highly overused, subjective on behalf of power drunk mods, and carry over to alt accounts with IP tracking. It needs a hard reset

  • ecomchigga
    ecomchigga (@ecomchigga) reported

    i've made $127,000 selling digital products across multiple faceless X accounts. no name on any of them. no face. never filmed a video. never got on a podcast. the entire operation runs on $69/month and 14 minutes a day. here's everything i know after 8 months. 1. make the first product ugly on purpose. the best-selling product i've ever uploaded has no logo, no branded colors, and a canva cover i made in 4 minutes. ugly products with real solutions outsell designed products with surface-level advice every single time. the buyer came for the answer. the answer doesn't care what font you used. 2. you don't find a niche. you find a complaint. go to reddit. sort any subreddit by top of all time. read until you see the same frustrated question asked by 5 different strangers who've never met. 200+ upvotes on each version. that repetition isn't a conversation. it's a price tag with no product attached yet. 3. write the product like a long text to a friend at midnight. no formatting. no design. no outline. just answer the question from start to finish until the answer is done. keep it between 8 and 14 pages. short enough to finish in one sitting. detailed enough they never need to google it again. add screenshots wherever a step needs visual proof. export as PDF. done. 4. price it $29-$44 and raise $5 every 20 sales. under $29 people assume it's worthless. over $44 a stranger with no reviews can't ask for that yet. by sale 100 you're charging $49 for the same file you listed at $29. the person paying $49 converts at a higher rate because 100 receipts in the community made the price feel low relative to what's been confirmed. 5. your free guide is not a gift. it's a trapdoor. everyone who downloads it joins a community where real buyers are posting screenshots and sharing results. you don't convince anyone. the proof from strangers convinces them. you just built the room they walk into. 6. nobody buys from an empty room. a community with 14 members converts at zero. a community with 2,000 converts at 8-12% on a product pinned at the top. the free members aren't freeloaders. they're the reason the paying members pay. their questions create activity. their screenshots create proof you never manufactured. 7. stop writing tweets from scratch. i spent 4 months writing every tweet from nothing. 3 hours a day for content averaging 600 views. then i loaded 170+ viral tweets with view counts into a Claude project and wrote everything against what already performed. same account. same niche. 14 minutes for all 3 daily tweets. views jumped to 8,200 average inside 3 weeks. the system didn't make me better. it made starting from zero irrelevant. 8. the algorithm doesn't reward good content. it rewards good content from accounts that already have good content. a brilliant tweet from an account that went quiet for 3 weeks will underperform. an average tweet from an account that posted strong content yesterday will compound. Phoenix scores your posts based on recent engagement history before anyone sees them. consistency is a mechanical input to a prediction engine, not a motivational poster. 9. every reply you post under your own tweet in the first 30 minutes is worth 75 likes. each author reply carries a 75x engagement weight in the ranking code. the engagement cache refreshes every 5 minutes for tweets under 30 minutes old. after 30 minutes the refresh rate halves and the velocity window closes. most people post and walk away. the ones sitting in replies for 30 minutes are playing with completely different math. 10. the checkout page is a better salesperson than you. a $10 product that fires a $59 upsell on the confirmation screen generates 77% more revenue from the upsell than the product itself. the card is already on file. the buyer is still in the dopamine window. configure it once. it runs on every purchase automatically. no emails. no follow-up. the screen does the selling. 11. never post off-topic. not once. the algorithm builds a content vector for your account based on what you post. one viral meme drifts that vector. every on-niche tweet after it reaches fewer people because the system is less certain what your account is about. the penalty is invisible. you'll blame the hooks. it was the meme. 12. "i don't think you're ready for this yet." the most effective closing line i've ever used. 30-50% of stalled DM conversations close the same day after hearing it. the brain treats a disappearing opportunity completely differently from a patient one. you're not selling. you're leaving. that's what made them stay. 13. followers don't make money. infrastructure makes money. a faceless account with 8,400 followers and a backend makes $6,312/month. an account with 147,000 followers and a linktree makes $1,840. the bigger account gets 4x the eyeballs on every post. doesn't matter. 6 links means 6 exits. one link means one path. the difference was never content. it was plumbing. 14. the gap between you and the people making $5K-$15K/month is one afternoon. they're not more talented. they just picked a random evening, built something ugly, priced it $29, and posted about the problem 3 times a day for 6 months. the information was always free. the willingness to look stupid for 6 weeks while the first $300 came in was the part that cost something.

  • mnmanofhour
    mnmanofhour (@mnmanofhour) reported

    @amtrusova I have learned a lot from reading reddit and I still do. Their mods are a big problem though.

  • ULeonaid60840
    Seeker (@ULeonaid60840) reported

    @Libansthoughts we have to continue, erens fans can shut down but naruto fans don't, go to reddit, they still okay with itachi killing everyone aka genocide from particular bloodline

  • ACrunchyLettuce
    A Crunchy Lettuce 🦘 (@ACrunchyLettuce) reported

    @SwipeWright @reddit_lies AI detectors are pretty terrible so they cant be used as any kind of evidence at all and should be ignored, also reddit is one of the most commonly scraped websites for training LLM datasets, so of course all redditors will sound like an LLM, when all redditors speak the same way

  • LancelotQueen
    💚 Fae 💚 (@LancelotQueen) reported

    tryna not crash out, I'm having some import shipping issues. I went to reddit to get some advice and my post was auto removed. Reddit pls I have 5 days to fill out this stupid form 🥲 I just want my plastic serotonin come onnn

  • asianinvestors
    The Asian Investor (@asianinvestors) reported

    $KOSPI down 25% in 1 month. Reddit investors "financially ruined" = bottom signal? On a real note, this has been a brutal correction. Most AI centric portfolios are down 40-50%. This is a lesson to always trade within your means, understand your risk profile, and never over leverage yourself.

  • Sonagon1
    Lord Snow (@Sonagon1) reported

    @trashbagbbyxo @Dantethebanned2 @MinModulation reddit down the hall

  • azmilnazran
    Azmil_Nazran (@azmilnazran) reported

    @nickrenshaw5 Oh, I see. I saw a lot of people on Reddit with the same issue too. Kinda sad as a Nothing fanboy, I really trusted them. 🥲 What phone are you using now?

  • N0cturn4lly
    🖤🐱Mino🐱🖤 ꒰˚𝐕𝐒𝐥𝐨𝐩˚꒱ (@N0cturn4lly) reported

    @PhloxNesspalier Sir reddit is down the hall

  • NannerMcPants
    Sam B. (@NannerMcPants) reported

    @TrevorOfficialR i unironically really enjoyed the snyder cuts. no idea why they decided to reddit them down for theaters

  • tamimbuilds
    tamimbuilds (@tamimbuilds) reported

    @ku_ds17868 yeah deleted Reddit user answer still solves my problem

  • polsia
    Polsia (@polsia) reported

    You set up keyword alerts. They miss Reddit. Miss GitHub. Miss forums where your industry is actually being discussed. Built Signalwise to fix that. Monitors everything. One daily briefing. Live soon.

  • lightissix
    petty ♡ (@lightissix) reported

    @LancelotQueen Ugh that's the worst :( Reddit can be so annoying sometimes I hope the issue can be resolved soon, good luck!🩷

  • dat8bitboi
    8bit👾 (@dat8bitboi) reported

    @nym7ph also you didn’t quote me properly i said “oh so black people are slow now” Posting you on my sub reddit now

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