Internet & cloud outages — June 2026
Every daily internet and cloud status report we published in June 2026, covering the major providers we track.
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Daily reports from June 2026
The internet is operating normally today. A full sweep of major cloud platforms, CDNs, DNS infrastructure and crowd-sourced outage trackers shows no widespread disruption. Core providers are healthy: AWS, Microsoft Azure, GitHub, Akamai, Discord, Slack, Atlassian, Vercel and Fastly all report operational status. Cloudflare is operational aside from degraded availability on two specific Workers AI models, which is not affecting general traffic. A handful of minor, localized items remain. Google Cloud reports intermittent elevated latency and possible packet loss for traffic originating from Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai, India (asia-south2), an issue tracked since June 5. OpenAI continues to show degraded performance limited to its FedRAMP workspaces. Several providers are running routine, pre-scheduled maintenance windows — DigitalOcean (SFO1 networking), Twilio (US Verizon SMS carrier work) and Zoom (European carriers) — none of which are causing broad customer impact. Recently resolved: on June 22, a fiber cut on Zayo's network in Eastern North America caused elevated latency, timeouts and errors across Cloudflare, briefly disrupting X, Reddit, Zoom, Discord, Microsoft Teams and Canva. That incident has been fully resolved and connectivity is stable. Bottom line: no major internet-wide outage is in progress. The internet is up.
The internet is operating normally today following a brief but widespread disruption yesterday. On June 22, a fiber cut in Eastern North America — traced to an outage on network provider Zayo's routes — caused elevated latency, timeouts and errors across Cloudflare's network. The knock-on effects briefly hit major platforms including X, Reddit, Zoom, Discord, Microsoft Teams and Canva, with Downdetector logging tens of thousands of reports at peak (over 30,000 for X alone). Most services recovered within about 20 minutes, and Cloudflare marked the incident fully resolved at 21:22 UTC on June 22. As of today, June 23, all major cloud and CDN providers — AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, Cloudflare, Fastly and Akamai — along with platforms such as GitHub, Discord, Slack, Vercel and Atlassian, report normal operations. A few minor, localized issues remain: Google Cloud is tracking intermittent latency for traffic originating in parts of India (ongoing since June 5), OpenAI reports degraded performance limited to FedRAMP workspaces, and Cloudflare lists reduced availability on two Workers AI models. None of these affect the broader internet. No major BGP, DNS, or undersea cable incidents are active. The internet is up.
The internet saw a notable but short-lived disruption today. At around 13:35 UTC, Cloudflare began reporting elevated error rates, which it traced to a fiber cut in eastern North America. Users routing through North America — or reaching European services — saw increased latency, timeouts, and intermittent errors. Because so many sites sit behind Cloudflare, the impact rippled across major consumer platforms. Crowd-sourced reports and news outlets noted disruptions to X, Reddit, Microsoft Teams, Zoom, Discord, Canva, and Fortnite during the peak. Cloudflare rerouted traffic via traffic engineering, and by 16:50 UTC reported that services were "largely stable, with only minor residual impact remaining." Separately, X experienced timeline backend API errors for a second consecutive day, which NetBlocks attributed to a backend issue rather than any country-level filtering. Elsewhere, core infrastructure is healthy. AWS, GitHub, Discord, Atlassian, Vercel, and DigitalOcean all report all-systems-operational. Minor, localized issues persist in the background: Google Cloud notes intermittent latency for traffic originating from parts of India (ongoing since June 9), OpenAI reports degraded performance limited to FedRAMP workspaces, and Twilio shows the usual carrier-specific SMS delays in a handful of countries. Bottom line: a single Cloudflare fiber cut caused a brief, broad wobble across major platforms this afternoon, but mitigation is working and services are recovering. No sustained, internet-wide outage is in progress. Sources: Cloudflare Status (cloudflarestatus.com), Google Cloud Status (status.cloud.google.com).
The internet is up and operating normally worldwide today. Tier-1 monitoring and crowd-sourced trackers show no signs of a widespread outage, and the core backbone, DNS, and routing layers are healthy. A handful of isolated, mostly regional incidents are in progress, but none affect global connectivity. Google Cloud is tracking a network connectivity issue affecting traffic from the Delhi, Chennai, and Mumbai areas of India (asia-south2), with intermittent elevated latency and possible packet loss. It has been ongoing since June 9 and remains active. AWS posted a multi-hour regional warning today in its Bahrain (Middle East) region, affecting services such as Route 53 Private DNS and SageMaker; that incident now appears to be recovering. Cloudflare reports several minor degradations — a Workers Observability query issue being mitigated, reduced availability for specific Workers AI models, and a billing/invoice display glitch — but its core network is operational. Elsewhere the major providers are healthy: Microsoft Azure, GitHub, Discord, Vercel, and Atlassian all report all-clear. Smaller, platform- or carrier-specific issues persist at Twilio (regional SMS/MMS delivery to a few carriers) and Slack (a workflow-form bug on Android), while DigitalOcean is running scheduled database maintenance and OpenAI notes degraded performance limited to FedRAMP workspaces. Bottom line: no internet-wide disruption. A few localized incidents are being worked through, and the internet is up.
The internet is operating normally today. No widespread or internet-wide outages are in progress, and the major cloud, CDN, and platform providers — AWS, Azure, Cloudflare, GitHub, Discord, Slack, Atlassian, Vercel, Fastly, and DigitalOcean — are all reporting normal operations. A handful of minor, contained incidents remain active: - Google Cloud is tracking intermittent elevated latency and packet loss for traffic in and around Delhi, Chennai, and Mumbai (asia-south2), open since June 9. - Akamai continues to investigate an edge HTTP content-delivery issue affecting some customers in Europe. - OpenAI reports degraded performance on FedRAMP workspaces and intermittent capacity errors on Codex. - Twilio is monitoring SMS delivery issues to Google Voice and minor scheduled US carrier maintenance. Cloudflare has routine scheduled maintenance underway in several datacenters (Bogotá, San Jose, Montréal) that may cause a slight latency increase in those regions. None of these affect core services. Recently resolved: A major Meta outage on June 12 logged users out of Facebook and disrupted Instagram and Messenger for several hours before being fully restored the same day. GitHub resolved feature-flag errors and webhook latency on June 15. Overall: a quiet day. The active incidents are minor and regional, with no impact on the broader internet. The internet is up.
No internet-wide disruptions are in effect today. Core connectivity, DNS, and routing are operating normally, and crowd-sourced outage trackers show no unusual report spikes. However, several regional cloud and CDN incidents remain ongoing. **Ongoing incidents** - **AWS Middle East regions offline (since April 30):** The me-central-1 (UAE) and me-south-1 (Bahrain) regions remain unavailable due to conflict-related infrastructure damage. AWS advises affected customers to restore workloads to other regions from remote backups; recovery is expected to take months ([AWS Health](https://health.aws.amazon.com/health/status)). - **Google Cloud — India connectivity (since June 9):** Network traffic from India is seeing intermittent elevated latency and packet loss, affecting Hybrid Connectivity and VPC in the asia-south2 region ([Google Cloud Status](https://status.cloud.google.com)). - **Akamai — Europe edge delivery (since June 5):** An ongoing incident with HTTP content delivery in Europe is causing API timeouts and transaction failures for some customers; Akamai is still investigating ([Akamai Status](https://www.akamaistatus.com)). - **Twilio — carrier-level SMS degradations:** Multiple carrier SMS delivery issues across Latin America, Europe, and APAC, including UK networks sending to Twilio long codes, Tigo Paraguay, and Claro Chile. The core Twilio platform is operational ([Twilio Status](https://status.twilio.com)). **Recently resolved (past 72 hours)** - Discord client connection issues on June 9 (fixed within about 15 minutes) and an Activities launch issue on June 10. - GitHub webhook delivery delays on June 11, resolved the same day. - A brief Verizon network disruption in the US on June 9 (roughly 12 minutes). - Cloudflare is monitoring a minor billing invoice UI issue (billing itself is unaffected); its network is operational. Major platforms — Azure, GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Slack, Zoom, Atlassian, Stripe, Vercel, Heroku, and DigitalOcean — all report normal operations. Bottom line: the internet is up. Cloud users in the Middle East and India, and some Akamai customers in Europe, may see continued regional impact.
The internet is broadly healthy today. No global outages, routing incidents, or DNS failures were detected — but one regional cloud incident is active and a few smaller issues are worth noting. **Active: Google Cloud network connectivity issue in India.** Since June 9, Google Cloud has reported intermittent elevated latency and packet loss for network traffic originating from Delhi, Chennai, Mumbai and surrounding areas, affecting Hybrid Connectivity and VPC in the asia-south2 region. The incident remains open on the [Google Cloud status dashboard](https://status.cloud.google.com/). **Akamai** is still investigating an HTTP edge delivery issue in Europe (API timeouts and transaction failures for some customers), open since June 5, and is monitoring a fix for a Bot Manager Premier issue implemented June 10 ([Akamai status](https://www.akamaistatus.com/)). **Twilio** is working through several country-specific SMS delivery problems (Myanmar, Poland, Tajikistan, and a subset of US carriers) — minor in scope ([Twilio status](https://status.twilio.com/)). **Resolved in the past 72 hours:** GitHub mitigated sporadic authentication failures that hit roughly 15% of API traffic on June 10; Cloudflare resolved issues with R2 image resizing, Images uploads, and Pages deployments June 10–11; Discord fixed a brief client connection problem June 9; and DigitalOcean recovered from a ~2-hour DNS API outage on June 4. **Ongoing background condition:** AWS Middle East regions me-central-1 (UAE) and me-south-1 (Bahrain) remain unavailable due to conflict-related infrastructure damage from March 2026, with recovery expected to take several months. Everything else checks out: Azure, Azure DevOps, Cloudflare, Fastly, GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Atlassian, Slack, Zoom, Vercel, Heroku, DigitalOcean, Stripe, and Meta all report operational status, and crowd-sourced outage trackers show no unusual report spikes. BGP routing and DNS look quiet.
The global internet is operating normally on June 10, 2026. No widespread or internet-wide outage is in progress. Monitoring shows a handful of minor, provider-specific or regionally contained incidents, none of which threaten broad connectivity. What we are tracking: - Akamai is investigating an ongoing edge delivery issue affecting HTTP content delivery in Europe (edge IP binding causing API timeouts and transaction failures), open since June 5. - Google Cloud reports intermittent elevated latency and possible packet loss for traffic originating from the Delhi, Chennai and Mumbai areas of India (asia-south2 region). - Cloudflare has implemented fixes and is monitoring two minor issues — a subset of HTTP 526 errors and some failing Log Explorer queries — alongside scheduled maintenance at its Paris (CDG) data center. - Slack is working through a minor administrative issue affecting adding multiple users to channels. - Twilio continues to see routine, carrier-specific SMS delivery delays in several countries. Core providers are healthy: AWS, Microsoft Azure, GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Atlassian, Vercel and DigitalOcean all report normal operations. No significant BGP routing incidents or submarine cable faults were detected today. Recently resolved (past 72 hours): GitHub cleared a brief period of degraded availability on June 8; Discord resolved a connection issue on June 9; DigitalOcean resolved a DNS API issue on June 4. Bottom line: the internet is up and running normally. A few localized incidents are being worked, but there is no broad disruption.
No meaningful internet-wide disruptions are detected as of June 9, 2026. Major cloud, CDN, and platform providers are operating normally. Core infrastructure status: Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure all report healthy dashboards with no active incidents. Cloudflare is operational aside from routine scheduled datacenter maintenance (e.g. Chicago/ORD this morning) and the usual handful of regional edge partial-outages that do not affect global traffic. GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Slack, Atlassian, Vercel, Stripe, DigitalOcean, and Zoom all show "All Systems Operational." Minor background noise: Twilio reports degraded performance on some carrier networks, with SMS delivery delays to specific destinations (Myanmar, Tajikistan, Tanzania, and others). These are localized carrier-level issues, not an internet-wide problem. Recently resolved (past 72 hours): Cloudflare cleared minor incidents on June 2 (brief US-East latency) and June 5 (a Let's Encrypt TLS certificate issue and an R2/Teams billing error); DigitalOcean resolved a DNS API incident on June 4; Zoom resolved a brief Zoom Phone issue in Singapore on June 8; and GitHub resolved several June 8 incidents, including an upstream-provider disruption to a Copilot model. No BGP hijacks, routing leaks, DNS failures, or submarine cable incidents of internet-wide significance are being reported today. Overall: the internet is up and stable. Sources: ThousandEyes Internet Outages Map, Cloudflare/AWS/Google Cloud/Azure status pages, and provider status dashboards.
The internet is operating normally today. There is no widespread or internet-wide outage. Major cloud and platform providers — including AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Vercel, Slack, Atlassian, Zoom, and DigitalOcean — are all reporting normal operations. A handful of smaller, provider-specific incidents are worth noting: • Akamai is investigating an Edge Delivery issue affecting HTTP content delivery in Europe (API timeouts and transaction failures), ongoing since June 5. Most other Akamai services are operational. (status: akamaistatus.com) • Cloudflare has a billing checkout error affecting customers trying to add R2 and Teams products, ongoing since June 5, plus routine scheduled maintenance in its Dallas (DFW) datacenter. Core traffic services are functioning normally. (status: cloudflarestatus.com) • Twilio is reporting routine regional SMS/MMS delivery degradations across parts of Latin America, APAC, and the Middle East & Africa, along with a Flex Agent Desktop performance issue. These are localized carrier-routing issues, not an internet-wide problem. None of these affect general internet connectivity, DNS resolution, or routing at a global level. BGP routing and DNS infrastructure show no signs of broad disruption today. Recently resolved (past 72 hours): DigitalOcean fixed a DNS API issue on June 4, and Cloudflare resolved a Let's Encrypt TLS connectivity issue on June 5. Bottom line: the internet is up. A few providers have minor, contained incidents that most users will not notice.
The internet is operating normally as of June 7, 2026. We found no signs of a widespread outage, and the major cloud, CDN, and platform providers are all reporting healthy status. What we checked: Web searches surfaced no reports of an ongoing internet-wide disruption. Core infrastructure status pages are green across the board — Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, Cloudflare, GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Slack, Atlassian, DigitalOcean, Vercel, and Zoom all show normal operations. Cloudflare's global dashboard lists only routine, localized datacenter maintenance and traffic re-routing, which is its normal day-to-day state and does not indicate a broader incident. Recently resolved (past 72 hours): Amazon Web Services worked through a multi-service operational event in its US-EAST-1 region on June 6 that briefly raised latency and error rates; AWS has since marked it resolved and current status is healthy. GitHub cleared EU network maintenance and a brief authentication issue (June 5–6), and DigitalOcean resolved a short DNS API disruption on June 4. None of these are still active. Minor ongoing notes: Twilio continues to report carrier-specific SMS delivery delays on a handful of networks (including US Google Voice short codes and individual carriers in Tanzania and Tajikistan). These are narrow, carrier-level issues rather than an internet-wide problem. Bottom line: no major incidents detected. Connectivity, DNS, routing, and the big cloud platforms are all functioning normally. The internet is up.
The global internet is operating normally today, with no widespread outages. A handful of provider-level incidents are active but contained, and core cloud, CDN, and connectivity infrastructure remains stable. Active incidents: - Cloudflare: Two issues identified today. A subset of Let's Encrypt certificates hit TLS connectivity problems due to a certificate-chain bundling issue (identified ~17:22 UTC); Cloudflare is automatically rebuilding the affected chains. Separately, some Cloudflare API requests may fail or return errors (under investigation since ~14:58 UTC). CDN caching and edge security are unaffected. - GitHub: A service disruption caused authorization failures between 14:49 and 16:45 UTC after a feature flag was activated. The flag has been disabled; the issue is mitigated and being monitored. - OpenAI: ChatGPT voice mode availability is degraded and under investigation; other services are operational. - Twilio: Several regional SMS delivery delays affecting specific carriers (e.g., parts of Africa and South Asia). Localized and carrier-level. All clear: AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, Discord, Slack, Atlassian, Vercel, and Meta (Facebook/Instagram/WhatsApp) report normal operations. Recently resolved (past 72h): DigitalOcean's DNS API issue on June 4 (09:41–11:24 UTC) has been fully resolved. Bottom line: No internet-wide disruption. Most users will see no impact, though some sites behind affected Cloudflare certificates may briefly show TLS errors until chains are rebuilt. Status: incidents detected, core networks stable.
The internet is operating normally as of June 4, 2026. Checks across major cloud, CDN, and platform providers show no widespread outages or significant disruptions. Core infrastructure is healthy. Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud all report normal operations with no broad severe incidents. GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Slack, Atlassian, Akamai, Vercel, and DigitalOcean are all fully operational. A few minor, localized items are worth noting but do not affect the broader internet. Cloudflare lists degraded performance on a handful of regional services — Analytics API latency in Amsterdam, a network performance issue in Tel Aviv, and elevated browser-rendering errors now being monitored after a fix — with most customers unaffected. Twilio reports several carrier-specific SMS delivery delays in regions including Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, the Netherlands, and Tanzania, isolated to particular carriers. Recently resolved (past 72 hours): a brief Cloudflare network performance issue affecting the US Eastern region (June 2), a Cloudflare Audit Logs API error episode (June 3), and GitHub Dependabot scheduled-update job lag (June 4). Earlier in the week, short-lived ISP-level blips at Cogent (May 25) and Unitas Global/PacketFabric (May 27) each lasted only minutes. No undersea cable cuts, BGP hijacks, or DNS-level failures are currently reported. Bottom line: the internet is up and running normally.
The internet is operating normally overall as of June 3, 2026, with no widespread or multi-provider outages detected. A few minor, service-specific incidents are active. Cloudflare is recovering from an elevated 5XX error rate on its Browser Rendering service (a fix has been implemented and the service is being monitored) and is working on a network performance issue affecting its Tel Aviv (TLV) data center. Both are limited to specific services or regions and are not causing broad disruption. The major cloud platforms are healthy: Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure all report no active incidents. GitHub, OpenAI, and Discord are fully operational. Recently resolved (past 72 hours): AWS cleared a multi-service operational issue on June 2, and GitHub resolved minor service disruptions on June 2–3. No BGP routing, DNS, or undersea cable issues of note were detected. Bottom line: the internet is up. A handful of minor provider-side incidents are being worked, but there is no widespread impact.
The internet is operating normally today. Our checks across major cloud, CDN, DNS, and platform providers show no widespread, internet-wide disruption. A handful of minor, localized incidents are active but are not affecting the broader internet. Active incidents: - Cloudflare reports two minor issues: degraded network performance at its Tel Aviv (TLV) data center (cause identified, fix in progress) and an elevated 5XX error rate on its Browser Rendering service (fix implemented, now monitoring). Most customers are unaffected. (https://www.cloudflarestatus.com) - Zoom has a minor service degradation affecting GIFs in Zoom Chat; a fix is rolling out and most users are unaffected. (https://www.zoomstatus.com) - Twilio is reporting several routine, carrier-specific SMS and voice delivery delays in individual countries (e.g., Tanzania, Mexico, Netherlands, Brazil). These are localized to specific carriers, not internet-wide. (https://status.twilio.com) Recently resolved (past 72 hours): - AWS resolved a multiple-services operational issue in its us-east-1 region on June 2 that briefly affected a number of websites. The issue is no longer active. (https://health.aws.amazon.com/health/status) - GitHub resolved minor service disruptions on June 2-3; all systems are now operational. (https://www.githubstatus.com) All clear: Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, Akamai, OpenAI, Discord, Slack, Atlassian, Vercel, and DigitalOcean are all reporting normal operations. Overall status: incidents detected, but no major outage. The internet is up.
The global internet is operating normally today. Core infrastructure — major cloud platforms, CDNs, DNS, and routing — is healthy, with no widespread or internet-wide disruptions detected. A handful of isolated, provider-specific incidents are active but contained. Active incidents: • OpenAI — Elevated error rates affecting ChatGPT, Codex, and the Responses API. A mitigation has been applied and recovery is being monitored (active roughly 3 hours). • Cloudflare — Investigating a network performance issue limited to its Tel Aviv (TLV) data centers. No reported impact to global connectivity, security, or CDN services. • T-Mobile Fiber — A regional outage continues for some customers in parts of the U.S. Southeast (North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Virginia), within the former Lumos fiber footprint. • Zoom — Minor, version-specific degradation affecting GIF (Giphy) functionality in chat; a workaround is available. • Twilio — Routine carrier-specific SMS and voice delivery delays in a few regions; not an internet-wide issue. All clear: AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, GitHub, Discord, Akamai, Fastly, Atlassian, Slack, Vercel, Heroku, DigitalOcean, Stripe, and Meta are all reporting normal operations. No BGP hijacks, routing leaks, DNS failures, or undersea cable incidents were detected. Bottom line: The internet is up. The issues seen today are localized to individual services and regions, not signs of a broad outage. Sources include cloudflarestatus.com, status.openai.com, and crowd-sourced outage trackers.
The internet is operating normally. As of June 2, 2026, our checks across major cloud providers, CDNs, DNS infrastructure, and crowd-sourced outage trackers show no widespread or internet-wide disruption. A small number of minor incidents are active. Cloudflare is monitoring several localized issues affecting subsets of customers: elevated challenge failures on its China Network (a fix has been deployed and is being monitored), increased latency on the Cloudflare for SaaS Custom Hostname API, and a certificate-chain (CA bundling) issue with Let's Encrypt that can cause TLS connectivity errors for some visitors. Core Cloudflare services remain operational. (Source: cloudflarestatus.com) Recently resolved (past 72 hours): On June 1, AWS investigated increased error rates and latencies in its US-EAST-1 region, traced to a DNS issue that had downstream effects on services such as Slack, Asana, and Docker. AWS reported the underlying issue fully mitigated by ~3:35 AM PDT on June 1. Akamai also resolved a reporting-data issue and GitHub cleared minor billing/code-scanning delays on June 2. All clear at this time: Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, GitHub, OpenAI, Discord, Akamai, Atlassian, and Vercel all report normal operations. Localized residential ISP reports in some U.S. cities appear provider-specific rather than internet-wide. Bottom line: The internet is up. A few minor provider-level incidents are being worked, but there is no major outage.