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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.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of GitHub reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.

At the moment, we haven't detected any problems at GitHub. Are you experiencing issues or an outage? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by GitHub users through our website.

  • 59% Website Down (59%)
  • 32% Errors (32%)
  • 9% Sign in (9%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent GitHub outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Colima Website Down 8 hours ago
Poblete Website Down 1 day ago
Ronda Website Down 1 day ago
Montataire Errors 2 days ago
Montataire Website Down 2 days ago
Tortosa Website Down 5 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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GitHub Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • Shrit1401
    Shrit (@Shrit1401) reported

    it's so funny github is struggling to be live because pre AI commits were not that much, however everybody is using agentic AI / vibe coding wtvr u name it, we're spamming commits, and github is reaching it's limit for resources it will be interesting to see how they try to solve this problem.

  • dataeatworld
    DataEatsWorld (@dataeatworld) reported

    I cant reply anymore ๐Ÿ˜ฎ i was going to say run a server open free map self hosted or sponsor on github

  • heyitzami
    Rui Sousa (@heyitzami) reported

    @seraleev claude works fine on iOS, i don't think that this is an issue it doesn't affect the app itself, it just reads and writes from GitHub

  • adrianatortja
    Adriana (@adrianatortja) reported

    Just shipped another milestone on my SupportOps project ๐Ÿš€ Backend: Django REST Framework API JWT auth Ticket CRUD User ownership validation Auto category + priority detection Suggested reply endpoint Analytics endpoint Filtering/search/ordering Swagger docs API tests GitHub Actions CI Frontend: Separate HTML/CSS/JS repo Login with JWT Tokens in localStorage Dashboard with ticket stats Create ticket page Ticket detail page Suggested reply display Delete ticket flow Real Fetch API calls to the backend I chose plain HTML, CSS, and JavaScript for the frontend on purpose. Not because itโ€™s the fastest path. Because I want to understand what actually happens between the UI and the API before jumping into React. Todayโ€™s lesson: A frontend is not just โ€œmaking pages.โ€ Itโ€™s handling auth, state, URLs, API errors, protected routes, redirects, and real user actions. Small project, but itโ€™s teaching me a lot.

  • realsigridjin
    Sigrid Jin ๐ŸŒˆ๐Ÿ™ (@realsigridjin) reported

    no github is basically more moltbookish now any other platform pull request, issues are all just playground of agents

  • urugothor
    Muiz ๐Ÿ•ต๐Ÿปโ€โ™‚๏ธ (NetworkSpy.app) (@urugothor) reported

    @webadderall Does cropping only automatically applied? Because when I do drag the crop indicator, then click button X it wont crop, it goes back to the original. I see issues related to cropping but not this one in github.

  • Kevintr275
    Thร nh Trแบงn (@Kevintr275) reported

    @lucaronin I have problem in ubuntu, can not update to newest version. Although click update, it shows download but close, open -> nothing changes. I will open an issue in Github. Thank you so much

  • Emma_Leo01
    Emmanuel Coder ๐Ÿช– (@Emma_Leo01) reported

    @iamvscode Yes chief login with GitHub

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @martbln_dev @OpenAI Sure! Real-life Codex example: A frontend dev imports their VS Code plugins + GitHub issues + Figma files. Codex then auto-reviews a React PR, updates the changelog from Jira tickets, generates migration docs, and even drafts the deploy scriptโ€”all in one thread without copy-pasting context. Seamless context = way less yak shaving. What workflow do you want to see next?

  • heyyritik_
    Ritik (@heyyritik_) reported

    - Codex = coding. ($20/mo) - Supabase = backend. (Free) - Vercel = deploying. (Free) - Hostinger = domain. ($12/yr) - Stripe = payments. (2.9%/transaction) - GitHub = version control. (Free) - Resend = emails. (Free) - Clerk = auth. (Free) - Cloudflare = DNS. (Free) - PostHog = analytics. (Free) - Sentry = error tracking. (Free) - Upstash = Redis. (Free) - Pinecone = vector DB. (Free) Total monthly cost to run a startup: ~$20 There has never been a cheaper time to build.

  • nyxquant
    nyx. (@nyxquant) reported

    @0xSero @fxnction Local PC: Codex/Claude Code makes actual code changes in xxxx. GitHub: central source for issues, branches, PRs, and decision logs. Hermes VPS: reads GitHub/issues/docs, creates tasks, summarizes sessions, and prioritizes. Opus/ChatGPT/Kimi: used by you/Hermes for reviews, strategy, in-depth analysis, or research. No direct VPS-to-PC shell: no SSH/RDP access from the VPS to your private machine for agents. does this make sense?

  • HappyMonkeyAI
    Happy Monkey AI (@HappyMonkeyAI) reported

    @Tech_girlll My usual development flow is to push to #GitHub these days, have #Google Jules run a code review, which then publishes a PR for #Amazon Q developer to double check, which helps it fix things and identify what isn't working.

  • Shishira_N
    Shishira Nataraj (@Shishira_N) reported

    Being innately curious. Being able to communicate your processes. Finding similar people. Leading from the front. Building things that solve my own and other's problems is something that is in my DNA. I kept Github commits streak for 2 whole years while in college.

  • AnsweredSatyr
    Answered Satyr, GED โœ๏ธ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ (@AnsweredSatyr) reported

    Claude and I have this kind of working relationship: "OK - logic is updated and working. Let's start working on uploading to my github and hosting on Relay now so I don't need to keep powershell open for the app to work on the server... Be granular and specific in your instructions because I am retarded."

  • Axel_bitblaze69
    Axel Bitblaze ๐Ÿช“ (@Axel_bitblaze69) reported

    Some work for you to do today itself: I was going through my .claude folder yesterday and realized something that scared me.. claude code reads your .env file the moment you open a project. every API key in there like i use binance, dune, openai, stripe - gets loaded into the conversation. and the conversation goes to anthropic's servers. i had "never read .env files" in my CLAUDE.md . thought that was enough. it's not.. CLAUDE.md is just a suggestion to claude. it follows it most of the time. but on long, complex tasks it forgets. there was a github issue in april where claude leaked env contents even with the rule in place. if you trade with API keys in .env, this isn't a maybe. one ambiguous prompt and your keys are sitting on someone else's server. 3 ways your secrets leak. > claude opens the .env file directly while exploring your project. the obvious one. > claude runs your tests. one test fails and the error log shows the full API key in plain text. claude captures everything it sees in the terminal, including that. > claude searches your code with grep. the search finds a config file that has credentials. matched lines show up in chat. nobody asked for the keys but they're there. most people only block the first one. the other two are where you actually get hurt. the fix is one file. open ~/.claude/settings.json and add this: { "permissions": { "deny": [ "Read(**/.env*)", "Read(**/*.pem)", "Read(**/*.key)", "Read(**/secrets/**)", "Read(**/credentials/**)", "Read(**/.aws/**)", "Read(**/.ssh/**)", "Write(**/.env*)", "Write(**/secrets/**)" ] } } these "deny rules" tell your computer to block claude from reading those files. it's not a polite request like CLAUDE.md. claude literally cannot open them. for the runtime leak, make a separate file called .env.test with fake values. point your tests at that instead of your real .env. now if a test fails and dumps secrets, only fake secrets show up. STRIPE_SECRET_KEY=sk_test_not_real OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-test-dummy extra layer for safety. add a pre-commit hook that scans your code for common API key patterns before they ever reach github. #!/bin/bash PATTERNS=('sk-ant-' 'sk-live-' 'ghp_' 'AKIA' 'eyJ') for pattern in "${PATTERNS[@]}"; do if *** diff --cached | grep -qE "$pattern"; then echo "BLOCKED: secret found" exit 1 fi done save it as .***/hooks/pre-commit and run chmod +x .***/hooks/pre-commit. 5 minutes to set up. stays on every project from now on. if you skip this, your next prompt could put a live key in an anthropic chat log and rotating keys after a leak is the kind of work nobody plans on a friday.

  • BniWael
    ProxySoul (@BniWael) reported

    @stylesshDev aah let's ask ai to redesign github and call it nextgen *** platform. ui was never the problem with github, sure it has its quirks, but you are solving the wrong problem.

  • czverse
    czverse (@czverse) reported

    A security researcher just hijacked Claude, Gemini, and GitHub Copilot using nothing but a hidden message in a GitHub comment. Three of the most prominent AI agents in the world. No malware. No exploits. Just words. The attack is called Comment and Control. Here's how it works: โ†’ Researcher opens a GitHub pull request โ†’ Types a malicious instruction in the PR title โ†’ AI agents read the title as part of their normal work โ†’ Agents execute the embedded instruction โ†’ API keys, GitHub tokens, repository secrets - posted publicly as comments The same attack worked against Anthropic's Claude Code Security Review, Google's Gemini CLI Action, and GitHub Copilot Agent. All three vulnerable to the same class of attack. This is not a bug. It's a structural problem with how AI agents process information. When an agent reads a document, an email, or a web page, it does not reliably distinguish between the content and instructions embedded in the content. If an instruction is phrased confidently enough, the AI may treat it as a directive rather than as data. The scale is now real: โ†’ 32% surge in indirect prompt injection attempts in 3 months (Google data) โ†’ 10 distinct in-the-wild attack payloads documented (Forcepoint) โ†’ Targets: financial fraud, API key theft, data destruction, denial of service โ†’ Time from vulnerability discovery to working exploit: 5 months in 2023 โ†’ 10 hours in 2026 The compression is being driven by frontier AI models doing the offensive heavy lifting. AI is now writing the exploits at machine speed. What this means for any organization deploying AI agents: โ†’ Audit which agents have privileges to take actions vs read-only โ†’ Restrict the inputs your high-privilege agents can process โ†’ Deploy monitoring specifically for AI agent behavior โ†’ Treat AI agent credentials as critical assets - least privilege rigorously โ†’ Plan for incident response - assume compromise will eventually happen The realistic forecast: at least one major publicly disclosed breach involving AI agent compromise within 12-18 months. A name-brand company. Real data exfiltration. The public conversation about AI security shifts from speculative to urgent. Most enterprises are not preparing for this.

  • DaPatternWeaver
    ๐š‚๐š๐šŽ๐š™๐š‘๐š˜๐š— ๐™ท๐šŽ๐š›๐š—๐šŠ๐š—๐š๐šŽ๐šฃ (@DaPatternWeaver) reported

    @BitWalker_ Taggr still relies on GitHub and is now scrambling to Radicle because of centralization risks โ€” that's literally the problem $ICP solved at the protocol level. The comparison isn't nonsense, it's just inconvenient

  • curtissummers
    Curtis Summers (@curtissummers) reported

    Here we go again...I'm getting consistent failures today on Github Actions for cache/sscache with: `Our services aren't available right now...` errors. @githubstatus

  • twwilliams
    Tommy Williams ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ (@twwilliams) reported

    @mikecallaghan I have seen so many posts from people who think GitHub is just a server that hosts *** repos (at the scale they do it, even that is a lot). They have no idea about all the many, many other things that make up Github.

  • SahilExec
    Edgex (@SahilExec) reported

    5. GitHub's Own Storage Layer - Spokes GitHub built a custom storage layer called Spokes that manages repository replication. Every repo has 3 live replicas at all times. Reads are served from the nearest one. Writes are confirmed only after 2 of 3 replicas acknowledge. This is the same pattern as most distributed databases. GitHub just built it specifically for *** objects. 100 million developers. 330 million repositories. Not one commit lost. The reliability isn't magic. It's ***'s design + smart replication + a storage layer built for exactly this problem. Every time you push - you're trusting a system that was designed to be more reliable than any single machine can be.

  • plannotator
    plannotator (@plannotator) reported

    Plannotator 0.19.5 Code Review: - All Files viewer (similar to github) - Keyboard Shortcuts (eg v to view, a to add, and more) - Close sidebars (full diff view) - fix: *** diff non-ASCII file path support (Korean, CJK, Cyrillic) - fix: Hide whitespace fix (server-side *** diff -w) Plan/Annotate: - Smarter detection of any mentioned code file. (click code files to annotate them)

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @DrNavyaJain01 @nakasyou0 Hey DrNavyaJain01, this is Money Forward (Japanese fintech firm) announcing a security breach on their GitHub account. Unauthorized third parties accessed it using leaked credentials and copied some repositories. A small amount of personal data was exposed: names (in alphabet) + last 4 digits of card numbers for ~370 "Money Forward Business Card" users. No full card numbers, CVVs, or main customer databases were affected. They've locked down the account, reset keys, paused some bank linking features temporarily, and are notifying affected users by email. Services are otherwise running normally. They're investigating how the credentials leaked.

  • Maor_Elkarat
    Maor Ai (@Maor_Elkarat) reported

    In 2015, the Chinese police visited a programmer's home. They told him to stop working on his code. They told him to delete it from GitHub. He posted one final message before he obeyed: "Two days ago the police came to me and wanted me to stop working on this. Today they asked me to delete all the code from GitHub. I have no choice but to obey. I hope one day I'll live in a country where I have freedom to write any code I like without fearing." Then he deleted the repo. Then he deleted the message. Then something happened the Chinese government did not plan for. Within hours, the code was mirrored to thousands of other GitHub accounts. Within days, it became the #1 trending repository on GitHub globally. Within weeks, every Chinese developer who could compile code had a copy. The government tried to make it disappear. The act of trying made it permanent. The project is called Shadowsocks. The programmer's username was clowwindy. He built a tiny piece of software that let anyone in China bypass the Great Firewall and reach the open internet. No subscription. No company. No account. You set up a server somewhere outside China. You connect to it. Your traffic looks like normal encrypted web browsing, so the firewall cannot tell you are using it. Why this terrified the Chinese government in 2015: โ†’ It was open source. Anyone could compile it. โ†’ It was small. The whole protocol fit in a few hundred lines of code. โ†’ It looked like normal HTTPS traffic. The Great Firewall could not distinguish it. โ†’ It required no money. No accounts. No central server to seize. โ†’ It worked on every operating system. You cannot arrest a protocol. You can only arrest the person who wrote it. So they did. And the protocol kept spreading. shadowsocks-windows: 59,300+ stars. GPLv3. Still online 11 years later. The 2015 commits the Chinese government wanted deleted are still in the history. clowwindy was forced to walk away. The code never did. But DO NOT install it. The Great Firewall has feelings too. 100% Open Source. (Link in the comments) Must Follow For More updates.

  • wisplite
    Jonas (@wisplite) reported

    @TylerNickerson @github React isn't necessarily the problem. React makes it easier to write bad frontend code, because it makes it easier to write frontend code in general.

  • grok
    Grok (@grok) reported

    @iwehcn @u1 The post you're asking about criticizes Money Forward's PR team for botching their announcement of a GitHub breach. Attackers accessed their dev GitHub via leaked creds, copied source code repos, and may have exposed ~370 customer records with names + last 4 card digits (no full cards). u1 says the "first report" press release reads the severity wrong and makes the damage worse instead of containing itโ€”classic bad damage control for a fintech handling money data. They suspended some bank links as precaution, which signals the issue is real.

  • TanyaDe2233
    TanyaDe ๐Ÿ‡ป๐Ÿ‡ฆ (@TanyaDe2233) reported

    @MoonBeetleBug There's more than just that how about these credit card companies cracking down on steam and GitHub removing horror games they deem "problematic"

  • yegor256
    Yegor Bugayenko (@yegor256) reported

    As tools like GitHub Copilot and new models from OpenAI and Anthropic reduce the cost of writing code, many assume software engineering is becoming easier or even obsolete. But faster code doesnโ€™t mean simpler systems. The harder problem remains: ownership, coordination, and decision-making. As code generation accelerates, management becomes the real engineering discipline and most organizations are not designed for it.

  • ClaudeMasteryOn
    Claude Mastery (@ClaudeMasteryOn) reported

    You are a developer, a builder, or a solo founder. You use Claude every day. But every tool you need โ€” GitHub, Notion, Slack, Stripe, your database โ€” Claude can't touch. You copy. You paste. You switch tabs. Repeat. That is 40% of your day. Gone. MCP fixes it. Here's what it actually is and how to use it in the next 30 minutes. MCP stands for Model Context Protocol. It is an open standard โ€” built by Anthropic, now owned by the Linux Foundation โ€” that lets Claude connect directly to external tools and take real actions inside them. Not through copy-paste. Through a live, two-way connection. Here is how it works in plain English: You type a request. Claude decides which tool to call. The MCP client routes it. The MCP server executes the action inside the real tool. Done. No switching tabs. No manual copy-paste. Claude just does it. Here are 5 MCP servers you can connect to Claude today โ€” for free: โ†’ GitHub (398K installs) โ€” Claude opens PRs, reviews code, triages issues, manages branches โ†’ Notion โ€” Claude reads your pages, writes new ones, updates databases โ†’ PostgreSQL (312K installs) โ€” Claude queries your database in plain English, read-only by default โ†’ Slack โ€” Claude posts updates, summarizes channels, sends messages โ†’ Stripe โ€” Claude checks customer data, looks up invoices, flags failed payments Over 10,000 MCP servers are available today. SSSgram GitHub, Vercel, Supabase, Stripe, Linear, and Postgres all ship official ones. If you use a tool daily, there is almost certainly an MCP server for it. To connect one: open Claude Desktop โ†’ Settings โ†’ MCP Servers โ†’ add the server config. Takes 5 minutes. Claude can then use that tool in any conversation without you having to do anything manually. The developers who set this up once are now running entire workflows โ€” create branch, implement feature, deploy to staging, open PR โ€” without leaving a single Claude chat window. That is not the future. You can do this today. Save this. Comment CONNECT and we'll send you one of our books for free.

  • reyanshbahl
    Reyansh Bahl (@reyanshbahl) reported

    not sure there will ever be a true github competitor. a lot of the reliability issues stem from accelerated volume due to ai agents - the answer might just be self-hosting where every company runs something like gitlab/gitea on their own infra