Related ongoing threads:<p><i>Reddit has been down for more than an hour</i> - <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35158145" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35158145</a><p><i>Reddit Is Down</i> - <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35157078" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35157078</a>
I always like when people say Twitter's lower reliability will drive people off the site.<p>Reddit's been awful for more than a decade and people still use it.
Been having probs for 4 hours -> <a href="https://downforeveryoneorjustme.com/reddit" rel="nofollow">https://downforeveryoneorjustme.com/reddit</a>
Looking at Downdetector it looks like Reddit and AWS started having problems simultaneously:<p><a href="https://downdetector.com/status/reddit/" rel="nofollow">https://downdetector.com/status/reddit/</a><p><a href="https://downdetector.com/status/aws-amazon-web-services/" rel="nofollow">https://downdetector.com/status/aws-amazon-web-services/</a>
> We've implemented our fix and are slowly allowing things to ramp back up. We're not yet out of the woods. How do you draw a banana? Asking for a friend.
Posted 18 minutes ago. Mar 14, 2023 - 16:18 PDT<p><a href="https://www.redditstatus.com/incidents/1xslswydctkp" rel="nofollow">https://www.redditstatus.com/incidents/1xslswydctkp</a>
funnily enough today was also the day I saw a hackernews comment recycled in a twitter post in reddits daily rolling top10, something that I haven't seen before.<p>From r/antiwork of all - <a href="https://old.reddit.com/r/antiwork/comments/11r3sfs/rich_vs_poor/" rel="nofollow">https://old.reddit.com/r/antiwork/comments/11r3sfs/rich_vs_p...</a><p>The practice of re-posting across platforms amuses me.<p>For direct domain links nothing was >6k upvotes yet, but hard to do analytics on screenshots, the common currency of the crossposting economy - <a href="https://old.reddit.com/domain/news.ycombinator.com/top/?sort=top&t=all" rel="nofollow">https://old.reddit.com/domain/news.ycombinator.com/top/?sort...</a>
No other website of major size is as unreliable as reddit. In over 10 years of usage I've had noticeable facebook downtime only _once_. Meanwhile reddit seems have a major outage at least yearly and minor unavailability on an hourly basis. Even when they're not down, it's slow as fuck. Are they incompetent?
Reddit hacked: Criminals steal source data and internal info in cyberattack | TechRadar<p><a href="https://www.techradar.com/news/hackers-steal-reddit-source-data-and-internal-data-in-cyberattack" rel="nofollow">https://www.techradar.com/news/hackers-steal-reddit-source-d...</a>