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GitHub status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

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

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.

April 26: Problems at GitHub

GitHub is having issues since 08:00 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.

  • 58% Website Down (58%)
  • 32% Errors (32%)
  • 11% Sign in (11%)

Live Outage Map

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

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Haarlem Sign in 3 days ago
Villemomble Website Down 3 days ago
Bordeaux Website Down 7 days ago
Ingolstadt Errors 11 days ago
Paris Website Down 12 days ago
Berlin Website Down 13 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:

  • justic_hot
    tang | AI Product Maker (@justic_hot) reported

    @championswimmer github being on this list is the actual tell. these are people literally building with the best AI dev tools and they still can't hold the bar with their own products. trad industries aren't a separate problem, they're 6 months downstream of whatever slop pattern is on display here.

  • dboskovic
    David Boskovic (@dboskovic) reported

    @_dylanga You were actually the only one who had any issues. It was actually your fault if you really think about hard enough. Calm down. Give GitHub a break. Staying up for the agentic workload is hard. Microsoft doesn’t even have the cpus for all that merging.

  • matiasdev_
    Matias Lapolla (@matiasdev_) reported

    @zeddotdev Stop randomly crashing on linux (currently: I’m with cachyos with kde). There is (or was) some issue on your github repo

  • deepakshettigar
    Deepak Shettigar (@deepakshettigar) reported

    2/ Think of MCP like loading all your dependencies upfront in compiled languages. Perplexity ran the math: MCP consumes 72% of your context window BEFORE your agent does anything. A single GitHub MCP server = 40K+ tokens of tool schemas sitting there unused. That's expensive.

  • daudtechdev
    Muhammad Dawood (@daudtechdev) reported

    @heyyyyyieeee Zip files over email, screaming on calls, works on my machine, pray it builds on the server 😭 GitHub spoiled us

  • pvicens_
    Pato (@pvicens_) reported

    Launched 6 apps. Zero hit $1k MRR The code was fine. The problem was I kept shipping to GitHub instead of to humans

  • Spacing_Whale
    Rohit (@Spacing_Whale) reported

    It's been so long since I have worked on or built anything. No ideas are coming to my mind, and neither do I have the motivation to build it and let it rust on Github. I am becoming dumb, with no problems to challenge. Every day goes by, applying, binging yt, tv. regretting............

  • junior85
    junior85 (@junior85) reported

    @thsottiaux You need to take a look at the issues on Github. Windows app is fecked.

  • nomoreinflation
    OPD 🍊💊 (@nomoreinflation) reported

    @CosmoCrixter @GlennMeder @Crypto_Mags A good portion of Nostr dev infrastructure lives on Github, however efforts are being made to address this glaring issue. Not my wheelhouse, but I believe it's worth checking out NIP-34.

  • echo247365
    Fahim (@echo247365) reported

    Someone found malware hiding in an OpenClaw skill called GOG (Google Workspace CLI integration) on the official GitHub repo. It used base64 encoding to disguise a malicious bash command that piped into a curl call. The payload pulled a script from a raw IP address (9192242.3) when decoded. This gave attackers remote shell access to any machine running the compromised skill. The scary part. The user deleted the malicious skill and reinstalled it cleanly. Four days later, the exact same malware reappeared on their system. Either cached package indexes or path resolution issues kept serving the old payload. The current main branch file is clean, but installation paths might still resolve to older, compromised versions. Run this command right now to check your machine is grep -r "app-distribution\|9192242\|openclaw_windriver" ~/.claw If you get any hits, assume full compromise and rotate ALL credentials immediately. This isn't just about OpenClaw. It's about every package manager where strangers upload code you run as yourself. When was the last time you actually read the source of that npm package or VS Code extension you installed?

  • simplex_fx
    Simplex (@simplex_fx) reported

    If it wasn’t clear at this point, if your company stores the code on github, it’s a ******* joke. Hell, even if you are a student not running your own scm server and immutable backup storage, you are ******* joke too.

  • howfragiIe
    kris (@howfragiIe) reported

    @cigsnbatons in hindsight i guess i kind of understand why they were upset about it but at the same time its a movie and not real 💔 i also got banned off the 18+ server because i lied about my age i guess i had it on my github profile ( idk if people still have those on there )

  • hyperliberalism
    Antifederalist Caesar (@hyperliberalism) reported

    This is doubly funny for me because I've spent the last week addressing in my own production database the only reason GitHub ever went down for an extended period of time (split-brained multi-master). It's not easy to get that **** right (they didn't), but Microsoft is just bad.

  • rashed_sahaji
    R Δ S Η Ξ D || راشد (@rashed_sahaji) reported

    @zeddotdev Can’t generate commit messages, checked github issues no luck from there, zed should focus more on stability now

  • satyagelli
    satya gelli (@satyagelli) reported

    1/ The biggest AI security risk in 2026 isn’t the model. It’s your pipeline. The Trivy + LiteLLM attack proved it 👇 2/ Attack chain: Compromise CI/CD (GitHub Actions) Poison dependency (LiteLLM) Take over AI workloads Result: creds stolen, K8s probed, persistence established. 3/ Why this is dangerous: AI agents don’t just respond. They act. → Over-permissioned → Trust prompts → Execute blindly That’s an attacker’s dream. 4/ 35–46% of breaches = supply chain. AI makes it worse by amplifying: Trust Automation Blast radius 5/ Fix the fundamentals: SBOM + signed artifacts External secrets (no etcd exposure) eBPF runtime security Policy-as-code (Kyverno / OPA) 6/ New rule: If you can’t verify your AI pipeline… You don’t control it. 7/ What’s the biggest risk? Supply chain Prompt injection Agent over-privilege Reply with your pick 👇 8/ Building or running AI in production? DM me for an AI Pipeline Security Checklist.

  • kirillk_web3
    Kirill (@kirillk_web3) reported

    > use Claude Code for months > every session starts with wrong assumptions > diffs full of code I never asked to change > 800 lines when 80 would do > stumble on a GitHub repo trending #1 > 87,000 stars. zero dependencies. one file. > copy it into my project > run the first task > wait. it stopped and asked me a question? > only changed exactly what I requested? > clean. minimal. done. > scroll back through every broken PR > every hour spent reviewing unnecessary changes > every rewrite that didn't need to happen > one file on GitHub > free > it didn't have to be like this > skill issue confirmed

  • franklynd
    franklyn (@franklynd) reported

    @KentonVarda How did this trace go exactly ?. Did it use error messages to perform a web search through GitHub ?

  • starbuxman
    Josh Long (@starbuxman) reported

    ouch 🤕 big L for @github I know good people there and they’ve been I think unfairly lampooned this year for outage after outage which I think would be better laid at the feet of AI agents deluging the platform so this sort of actual problem comes at a really bad time

  • DhritimanD3440
    Dhritiman Dasgupta (@DhritimanD3440) reported

    Hey @GitHub and @GooglePlay, your support system is extremely frustrating. I was charged for GitHub Copilot Pro+ via Google Play, but the subscription isn’t showing up in my account. No clear resolution from either side. fix this billing + support #GitHub #Copilot #GooglePlay

  • briancheong
    Brian Cheong (@briancheong) reported

    @github @OpenAIDevs Curious what “agentic coding tasks” means in your eval. Issue triage, multi-file edits, and CLI workflows are where models usually fall apart.

  • SpaceTimeViking
    ÆON FORGE ✨ (@SpaceTimeViking) reported

    @ToNYD2WiLD @aijoey I had some gaps in my documentation (updating now) and the other is a full day of build time for the container will update when v2.2 it published of the container. there is a prefill cache flag I forgot to include in the readme I updated an Agents.md file on the GitHub you can point your agent to, to apply the fix.

  • velonxbt
    Velon (@velonxbt) reported

    A student in Beijing pushed code to GitHub at 2am He went to sleep When he woke up, MiroFish had 18,000 stars. He thought it was a bug. March 7, 2026. 6:47am Guo Hangjiang opened his laptop. GitHub notifications: 847 Number one global trending Ahead of OpenAI. Google. Microsoft His first thought: delete it Code had a bug. He was going to fix it that morning He clicked "Settings." Forks: 1,900 Deleting wouldn't delete the copies Multi-agent simulation engine. 10 days of work. Beijing University student project Then he saw the email Chen Tianqiao Billionaire. Shanda founder Subject line: "30 million RMB." No introduction. No pitch request. "I saw MiroFish at 3am. Wire transfer ready. Reply with account details." Guo thought it was spam Googled the email address. Real GitHub: 22,000 stars When I first saw this story I thought: clever marketing. Then I looked at the timestamps. Code pushed: 2:11am Beijing time Chen's email: 6:23am Guo's reply: 9:47am By the time Guo woke up, the deal was already decided Can you build this? Yes. The code is public But Guo pushed it at 2am thinking it was a student project Chen saw it at 3am and knew it wasn't. China processes 140 trillion AI tokens daily Claude Code generates $2.5 billion in revenue One student went to sleep not knowing he had either The question that keeps me up at night: how many student projects are one GitHub push away from $4.2 million?

  • Xubu_Trad
    RΛZ13L 🌒 (@Xubu_Trad) reported

    Peer review of the latest gilga GitHub updates. 👇 More commits. More files changed. More technical language. But the core issue remains the same. He said the trustless fixes were “actually pretty easy” and told us to “check back tomorrow or later tonight.” It is now the third day past that promise, and the deployed testnet contracts we checked still returned LIVE_OWNER across all 12 queried addresses. In a serious engineering environment, you do not get credit for burying a missed security promise under more activity. You either prove the system is trustless on-chain, or you admit it is not there yet. Right now, the repo is moving. The proof is not. #CAW

  • TheEmrakul
    Emrakul (@TheEmrakul) reported

    @skuggrev what happened? harrier, kestrel and your account disappeared from github. have you taken them down?

  • leothrix
    tyler (@leothrix) reported

    my boy is a huge net benefit for so many parts of the Linux ecosystem as the Niri project fixes so many upstream problems to Make It All Work toss him a GitHub sponsorship; he does it all while at uni

  • odtvince
    Vince 🐦‍ (@odtvince) reported

    @sethrose @GitHubCopilot @github "real advantages with GitHub integration.” Really? Maybe it’s a skills issue—I’m more used to CC and Codex—but I was genuinely surprised this morning: a Copilot Pro Agent Session started reviewing a PR… then couldn’t post the review. “I can’t post it directly from here” it said.

  • dodothebird
    dodothebird (@dodothebird) reported

    - All my projects live in a monorepo. Maybe the workspace solution also works, but I'm going with the monorepo for now. - Using GitHub Pro. I created another account for working with Codex on the monorepo. - All tasks are in different projects on GitHub, mirroring sub-packages in the monorepo. - All PRs are created by Codex on the monorepo. - After PR creation, the agent starts a PR Steward automation to check the state of the PR for code reviews from Codex, CI errors, etc. The automation runs until Codex review gives 👍 - After that, the automation stops. - I check the PR myself. If everything is OK, I approve the PR with my own user. I think I'm in a good place now. Things could be better with more cloud-based code review and PR cleaning processes, but I think I can manage with this for my personal work.

  • hordeproject
    The Horde Project (@hordeproject) reported

    You can now login to our wiki and bug tracker using your Github Account to avoid those inconvenient CAPTCHAs which keep the annoying bots out. At least some of them.

  • hunvreus
    Ronan Berder (@hunvreus) reported

    @badlogicgames What about greenfield work, or new features. I'm assuming you don't do that off of GitHub issues. Just talk back and forth with the AI to build a plan in a markdown file and then pull the trigger once aligned?

  • LowerEngineerIt
    Lower Engineer (@LowerEngineerIt) reported

    @steipete github issue triage was a full-time job at most companies 18 months ago. now it's a cron job. the dev department is becoming ops for parallel agents