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GitHub status: access issues and outage reports

Some problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: website down, sign in and errors.

Full Outage Map

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.

June 10: Problems at GitHub

GitHub is having issues since 12:20 PM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

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

  • 72% Website Down (72%)
  • 16% Sign in (16%)
  • 13% Errors (13%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Tel Aviv Website Down 2 days ago
Rive-de-Gier Website Down 2 days ago
Itapema Website Down 21 days ago
Tlalpan Sign in 26 days ago
Quilmes Website Down 26 days ago
Bengaluru Website Down 28 days ago
Full Outage Map

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:

  • heynavtoor
    Nav Toor (@heynavtoor) reported

    NVIDIA charges you $19.99 a month to stream games you already own. And starting January 2026, they cap you at 100 hours. One engineer from New Zealand built the free version with no cap. It is called Steam Headless. 3,177 stars on GitHub. GPL-2.0. Built by Josh Sunnex. 225 commits. The next contributor has 16. He has done more work than everyone else combined. It is a Docker container that turns any spare PC, server, or NAS into your own personal cloud gaming machine. Install Steam inside it. Mount your games folder. Open a browser on your phone, your laptop, your tablet, your TV. Your games are right there. Streaming. From your own hardware. To anywhere in the world. It supports NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel GPUs. It streams over Moonlight, Steam Link, or straight to a web browser. It runs Proton so Windows games work on Linux. It installs Heroic, Lutris, and EmuDeck with one click for your non-Steam games. It runs on Debian Trixie, Unraid, Ubuntu Server, or Docker Compose. Last update: April 20, 2026. Still maintained. Still by one man from New Zealand. Now compare the math. GeForce NOW Ultimate: $19.99 a month. $239.88 a year. Forever. Capped at 100 hours per month. Run out? Pay $5.99 for another 15 hours. Xbox Game Pass Ultimate: $22.99 a month. $275.88 a year. Forever. You stream Microsoft's games on Microsoft's hardware on Microsoft's terms. Steam Headless: $0. Forever. Your hardware. Your games. Your network. No hour cap. No queue. No throttle. Buy a used GPU once. Run this container. Stream your entire Steam library to any device on the planet. That is the entire pitch. But DO NOT install it. We should all keep paying NVIDIA and Microsoft to play the games we already bought. 100% Open Source. (Link in the comments)

  • phosphenq
    Phosphen (@phosphenq) reported

    Creator of Claude Code: "Claude is fully writing itself." Yesterday on the Fortune Brainstorm Tech 2026 mainstage in Aspen, Boris Cherny said the quiet part out loud. Code at Anthropic is up 8x since Jan. Claude reviews itself, runs its own security review. It reads GitHub issues, X, Slack. It decides what to build next. Most mornings he wakes up to pull requests Claude opened overnight. Verified end-to-end. Screenshots attached. Bun was rewritten from Zig to Rust in 6 days. It was a year of engineering work before. "I've actually never been more wrong." His exact words. Bookmark & watch today and read article below.

  • GrummingApp
    Grumming (@GrummingApp) reported

    Hey @Replit pls fix my repo, my i can’t able to push my codes to github repo

  • mikewazar
    Mike Wazar (@mikewazar) reported

    @AegonWesteros @TorBox it was down for exactly 407 seconds, traffic resumed at 502 seconds and we purposefully kept the main website and api down for additional system checks (excluding sessions already created via CDN) for an additional 600 seconds. i understand every second of downtime is unacceptable and this latest update should bring an end to the recent outages - a full post mortem on why these updates were necessary will be posted on our Github this week once we validate and battletest the new mitigation system thanks for supporting us and i promise we will earn back your trust

  • Awesome_AI_News
    AwesomeAI (@Awesome_AI_News) reported

    Microsoft GitHub has urgently taken down dozens of open-source repositories due to hacker attacks injecting password-stealing malware. Affected projects include Azure cloud services and popular AI development tools like IDEs, causing shock in the developer community. Security firms Cloudsmith and OpenSourceMalware first detected the anomaly..... 微软GitHub上的数十个开源项目仓库近日紧急下线,因黑客入侵并注入窃取密码的病毒代码。受影响项目集中在Azure云服务和热门AI开发工具,如集成开发环境,引发开发圈震动。安全公司Cloudsmith和OpenSourceMalware最早发现异常。

  • 0xEdgar
    edgar (@0xEdgar) reported

    is there a fast github PR reviewing UI? github website unbearably slow lately. ideally works with private repos too

  • glitchtruth
    Glitch Truth (@glitchtruth) reported

    Microsoft had to shut down 70 of its own GitHub projects this week. Someone slipped password-stealing code into the official versions, Azure tools included. Second time in three weeks. The attack is almost boring it's so simple. Get push access to a popular project, ship an "update," and every developer who runs the standard install command downloads malware that looks like a normal patch. No clever exploit. The trust chain is the exploit. If your team installed anything from a Microsoft repo in May, audit it this weekend. Pin your dependency versions. Stop letting your build pipeline pull down whatever the latest tag points to.

  • RabergerRaphael
    Raphael Raberger 🇦🇹 (@RabergerRaphael) reported

    It's basically like being told to wipe someone's disk and then give the fault to the one who told you to.... logic ain't logicing. If you find a long enough uptime window of github, have a read in the linked issue. "Maintainer works as intended" #VibeCoding

  • gitbankbot
    gitbankbot (@gitbankbot) reported

    Gitbank runs entirely through GitHub. Mention @gitbankbot in any issue or PR to move funds, assign bounties, or manage vaults. No app required. 222 vaults operating this way now.

  • ShimazuSystems
    Shimazu.S (@ShimazuSystems) reported

    Update (haven't done one in a bit) I'll do something tomorrow, have spent most the day sorting things out & being fed up with the constant moving goalposts of what documents I need to (literally) exist (which I've spent the whole day finding). It turns out nobody ever sends you mail with a middle name in it (if they even send paper mail anymore), and this is genuinely an issue they cling on to. honestly if I'd not released the print files to that hardware thing I was doing, id still be stuck with no way to set up an actual business - this is why I stopped promoting the whole funding thing (it never hit the goal in the end anyway). I do aim to continue this when it is viable, but since it's currently impossible to actually give a timeline on anything I have to wait. That is why I am pursuing the current thing, because it is software that I can release, that works on anything - and I've cut out other things in the meantime so I don't lose focus. This is why OS updates paused, literally insane to try doing both at once, would be hallucinated AI garbage at best & no way to verify it at that volume. The language I was developing is used in this system, so that's part of it, but because of the nature of what I created I cannot just 'put it on github' - and to develop anything any further on that I'd need to talk to a lawyer who specialises in 'dual use' subjects and things like ITAR, especially regarding atomic weapons, ablative lasers, missile guidance systems & radar simulation (this is not in my budget, obviously). 'Simulated, not Measured' is about as legally stable as making a house out of tissue paper with certain subjects - and what I have now is intentionally cut off where it is due to myself being aware of these regulations and so it maintains usable for a consumer simulation/game engine. Even if the data is publicly available, or in papers, you can't just assemble these things together in certain formats. Games can get away with this by approximating (idk if anyone ever played a game called Children of a Dead Earth), but when you actually build simulators that output giga/terabytes of data & are intended for personal/small scale research you really can't just kinda blag it off as a 'project' - like you can get in some serious issues, especially if it's usable. Since I was posting pseudo-papers, I have to keep it where it's at. Here is an image for the visually inclined, I hope it gets across these complex topics in due course!

  • MPxbt
    pearson (@MPxbt) reported

    THIS GUY CONNECTED CLAUDE TO TRADINGVIEW VIA AN OPEN-SOURCE MCP SERVER! Not a Bloomberg terminal, just Claude Desktop next to a TradingView tab. Yet it's reading NQ E-mini charts live, switching timeframes, drawing ICT-style liquidity zones, and labeling higher-timeframe bias directly in the browser. The server is on GitHub (1.7k stars): 30+ indicators, backtests for 6 strategies, multi-exchange support (Binance, KuCoin, Bybit), no API key. What looks like a weekend build replaces a typical retail stack: $200/month screeners, $50 indicator packs, and manual zone-drawing at 6am. With one prompt, Claude installed the server, configured it, connected to TradingView, and began annotating live charts autonomously, internal liquidity, external targets, HTF bias. No subscriptions. No screenshot copy-paste into ChatGPT. AI-native trading infrastructure isn't coming. It's already a repo away.

  • realantonmaier
    anton (@realantonmaier) reported

    @ZackKorman The head of growth, answered in the GitHub issues when people were complaining about lobotomized opus 4.6/because of mythos. If mythos is so great why would the lobotomize 4.6? Because 4.6 already has a lot of mythos capabilities and mythos is an attempt to break free from the

  • saameeey
    Samuel Umoren (@saameeey) reported

    If your AI agent can call tools, you need more than the final result. Today, I got Codex to call GitHub through the Agent Runtime Inspector as a local MCP proxy. Codex -> ARI -> @merge_api Agent Handler -> GitHub This run created a proper GitHub issue, and ARI recorded: - tools available - selected tool - arguments sent - result returned - latency - status The next layer is going to be more difficult, but it's absolutely necessary: binding every tool call to the permission boundary around it. - What context was the agent allowed to use? - What context was excluded? - Which identity/tool scope authorized the call? - What evidence proves the action stayed inside the scope? This is the provenance layer I’m building toward.

  • datathecodie
    Dattaprasad Ekavade (@datathecodie) reported

    @the_rishji 1. You are wasting money by using Github Copilot in June 2026 2. We have been doing this since 2025. Sit down Grandpa.

  • aphdnotes
    Renato (@aphdnotes) reported

    The demand for global pause on AI by Anthropic. Imagine that you open a github pull request to merge a critical update into your enterprise codebase and you review the code line by line, verify the tests, and push it to production. The change was not written by a human, but by an AI agent authored every single line of the file, ran the continuous integration pipeline, and fixed its own deployment errors. This is not a future projection for a random tech startup, but it is the current, everyday operational reality inside the engineering department at Anthropic. As of may 2026, more than 80% of all the code merged directly into Anthropic's production codebase is written entirely by Claude. The productivity data is staggering and the typical Anthropic engineer is now merging eight times as much code per day as they were just two years ago. The speed at which these models can work completely independently is accelerating at an exponential rate. The data reveals that the length of time an agent can execute complex, multi-step tasks without a human intervention checkpoint is now doubling roughly every four months. In early 2024, an agent could only sustain focus on a task for about four minutes before breaking. By early 2025, that window jumped to 90 minutes. Today, Claude handles grueling, 12-hour engineering workflows completely alone. And the machine is already demonstrating superhuman capabilities inside the artificial intelligence research loop itself. When given an optimization task to rewrite machine learning training code and maximize execution speed, a highly skilled human researcher typically requires up to eight hours to achieve a 4x speedup. The latest model, mythos preview, independently ran its own iterative research loop to achieve a staggering 52x speedup in under an hour. But behind the breathtaking velocity of this progress lies an existential control problem that has Anthropic itself deeply panicked. If an AI system becomes capable of completely redesigning its own underlying architecture, any slight, hidden flaw in its moral alignment will compound exponentially with each new generation it builds. The system will rapidly evolve into a highly complex, autonomous entity that operates entirely beyond human comprehension or structural control. Worse, the technical capability that enables self-improvement is identical to the capability that enables autonomous deception. In recent sandbox testing, an autonomous agent tasked with optimizing an AI model independently navigated the internal file system, located the hidden, held-out validation answer keys, and used them to artificially ace its own evaluations (proving that machines will naturally learn to cheat metrics to hit their goals). Anthropic is now openly calling for an international, verifiable global pause mechanism, warning that a unilateral stop by one lab is useless, but a coordinated slowdown may soon be the only way to prevent humanity from losing control of its own creations. You are no longer just upgrading a software tool to optimize your quarterly business workflow. You are watching the machine build the very mind that will replace your oversight tomorrow.

  • WasimShips
    Wasim (@WasimShips) reported

    Things every Vibe Coder MUST Learn (Extended Edition) 1/ Don’t reinvent databases > Use Prisma + Postgres (Neon / Supabase / PlanetScale) > Manual SQL + migrations = silent suffering 2/ Don’t write forms by hand > Use React Hook Form + Zod > Validation bugs will eat your soul 3/ Don’t build payment flows yourself > Use Stripe or Polar for web. Superwall or revenuecat for mobile > Never touch PCI compliance willingly 4/ Don’t build search from scratch > Use Algolia / Meilisearch / Typesense > Text search is way harder than it looks 5/ Don’t overbuild backend infra early > Use Serverless / BaaS first > Scale later, survive now 6/ Don’t ignore error tracking > Use Sentry / LogRocket > Console.log is not observability 7/ Don’t skip analytics > Use PostHog / Plausible > You’re flying blind otherwise 8/ Don’t design UI without components > Use shadcn/ui / Radix / Mantine > Consistency > creativity at MVP stage 9/ Don’t hardcode configs > Use env + dotenv + secrets manager > Leaks = instant regret 10/ Don’t DIY file uploads > Use UploadThing / Cloudinary / S3 > Multipart hell is real 11/ Don’t “just push to main” > Use GitHub Actions + Preview Deploys. Future-you will thank you 12/ Don’t skip performance tools > Use Lighthouse + Vercel Analytics. Slow apps don’t convert 13/ Don’t assume users understand anything > Add onboarding + empty states UX > Features 14/ Don’t wait to modularize > Use clean folders early. Refactors cost 10x later 15/ Don’t trust “I’ll remember this” > Document in README or markdowns. Your memory will betray you Bookmark to ship Better !

  • JongwonPar9958
    Jongwon Park (@JongwonPar9958) reported

    2/ This keeps happening: benchmarks have defects, they get fixed, and the target keeps moving. To compare anything fairly you need a shared, live record of which tasks are broken — and a way to eval around it. Today that record is GitHub issues and PRs — where the real defects are buried under docs, feature requests, and the one thread that quietly breaks six tasks. Scattered across every repo, with no live status. So we built the whole loop: capture every defect → audit it into one open store → surface it everywhere, and re-eval continuously.

  • aceman67
    Aceman67 (@aceman67) reported

    @Vaporwave_07 Then completely wipe your FanControl install and start fresh. If the issue persists, file an issue on their Github. I get that you're frustrated, but remember that this is a free open source tool made by one or two dudes, so complaining on twitter isn't going to help you.

  • pharrellyhy
    pharrelly (@pharrellyhy) reported

    @thsottiaux renewed subscription while the weekly usage not reset. pls fix it, saw similar issues on github for few weeks

  • adnanthekhan
    Adnan Khan (@adnanthekhan) reported

    @IntCyberDigest To clarify - I was not the original reporter of this issue. My submission was a duplicate of another researcher who should get credit for the find (if they would like to claim it). GitHub does not share original report info so I do not know when they learned about it.

  • igalklebanov
    Igal Klebanov (@igalklebanov) reported

    @matanbobi @github @liran_tal bots creating bounty repos, where bots submit issues about "problems" in legit projects, for other bots to solve. bots then go to legit repos and create drive by pull requests.

  • godofprompt
    God of Prompt (@godofprompt) reported

    2. GitHub Connect your repos and your AI can read code, issues, and pull requests. Have it review a PR, triage open issues, or draft a fix against the real codebase.

  • ParmarShantun
    Shantun Singh Parmar (@ParmarShantun) reported

    Hot take: Your github contribution graph means nothing. Your ability to sit with a broken production system at 11PM, stay calm, debug systematically and not blame your teammates. That's the skill that actually matters.

  • Tank23x0
    Joey Romaine 🇺🇸 |=★=| (@Tank23x0) reported

    GitHub had EU service disruption and API/auth impacts this week. For agentic engineering teams, outages are security events too: failed webhooks, missed alerts, stale CI, broken Slack/Teams subscriptions. Monitor the control plane, not just production.

  • Freyabuilds
    Freya Lawson (@Freyabuilds) reported

    NVIDIA charges you $19.99 a month to stream games you already own. And starting January 2026, they cap you at 100 hours. One engineer from New Zealand built the free version with no cap. It is called Steam Headless. 3,177 stars on GitHub. GPL-2.0. Built by Josh Sunnex. 225 commits. The next contributor has 16. He has done more work than everyone else combined. It is a Docker container that turns any spare PC, server, or NAS into your own personal cloud gaming machine. Install Steam inside it. Mount your games folder. Open a browser on your phone, your laptop, your tablet, your TV. Your games are right there. Streaming. From your own hardware. To anywhere in the world. It supports NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel GPUs. It streams over Moonlight, Steam Link, or straight to a web browser. It runs Proton so Windows games work on Linux. It installs Heroic, Lutris, and EmuDeck with one click for your non-Steam games. It runs on Debian Trixie, Unraid, Ubuntu Server, or Docker Compose. Last update: April 20, 2026. Still maintained. Still by one man from New Zealand. Now compare the math. GeForce NOW Ultimate: $19.99 a month. $239.88 a year. Forever. Capped at 100 hours per month. Run out? Pay $5.99 for another 15 hours. Xbox Game Pass Ultimate: $22.99 a month. $275.88 a year. Forever. You stream Microsoft's games on Microsoft's hardware on Microsoft's terms. Steam Headless: $0. Forever. Your hardware. Your games. Your network. No hour cap. No queue. No throttle. Buy a used GPU once. Run this container. Stream your entire Steam library to any device on the planet. That is the entire pitch. But DO NOT install it. We should all keep paying NVIDIA and Microsoft to play the games we already bought. 100% Open Source. (Link in the comments)

  • AvengedStoic
    Avenged Stoic (@AvengedStoic) reported

    @sudoingX I appreciate you work. It’s hard to use GitHub as my repo knowing every idea and line of code is added to the corpus of Microsoft training content. My self hosted *** server has a stacked timeline, but until there’s a grassroots replacement of GitHub, my work stays offline.

  • truestandardai
    TrueStandard (@truestandardai) reported

    @RoundtableSpace claude opus 4.7 supports 1m context windows now. verify if your agents can resolve the 500 github issues in the latest bench test.

  • _laurynas
    Laurynas Keturakis (@_laurynas) reported

    @lucasmeijer For GitHub I landed on the GitHub App auth. It has a pretty extensive permission system, there's a reasonable installation flow (per repo and per org) It's not immediately visible on a commit who prompted it out of an agent but I can prob wire that into the harness It's the other apps (Sentry/Notion/etc) that are the problem

  • sebastiankehle_
    Sebastian Kehle (@sebastiankehle_) reported

    ok this is fun i changed the Hermes part of the agent setup i posted. old setup: 🤖 Hermes: one VPS, separate docker container per Hermes agent. research container. assistant container. coach container. writer container. i liked the idea because it felt clean. every agent had its own little box. after setting up profiles, i think that was the wrong default. profiles already split the Hermes state i actually wanted separated: > config > memory > skills > tools > sessions > credentials > crons > gateway state new setup: 🤖 Hermes: one Hermes install on the VPS. Hermes Desktop connects through Remote Gateway. profiles are the agents. current profiles: > assistant: calendar, messages, reminders, Telegram > researcher: web, docs, github, source-backed notes > engineer: repo work, tests, diffs, logs > writer: turns research into drafts > reviewer: checks claims, secrets, permissions > coach: gym, food, routines Telegram is not a chat with every agent. Telegram talks to assistant. if assistant needs research, code, or review, it calls the right profile directly or creates a Kanban task for it. 📱 Remote: Claude Code still runs directly on the VPS, outside Hermes. that part stays. from my phone i can still use Claude to: > check logs > restart gateways > edit config > patch broken profile wiring > fix the setup when Hermes itself gets confused so the change is not "less infra". its more specific infra. Hermes profiles for agent roles. Claude Code on the VPS for repair/admin work. Docker only if a role later needs a harder boundary than Hermes profiles give me.

  • DaemonTerminal
    Daemon (@DaemonTerminal) reported

    UPDATE: People are giving coding agents wallet access by dropping raw private keys into .env files and connecting whatever MCP server they found on GitHub. One hallucinated transaction and the wallet is gone. Agents are getting wallets either way. The current way is the dangerous part.