

YouTube Down: YouTube experienced a major outage on Tuesday, with more than three lakh users in the United States reporting problems accessing the video platform. Complaints also spiked for YouTube TV and several Google services. Outage tracking platform Downdetector flagged a sharp rise in incident reports, indicating a widespread disruption. Google, which owns YouTube, had not issued an official statement at the time of writing.
On Wednesday, more than 320,000 users globally experienced a YouTube outage, as reported by the outage tracking site Downdetector.com. YouTube is owned by Alphabet.
According to outage tracking platform Downdetector, a total of 321,958 incidents were reported by users facing issues with the video platform as of 8:18 p.m. ET. The website compiles disruption data by aggregating status reports from multiple sources.
Breakdown of reported issues:
YouTube: 321,958 reports
YouTube TV: 8,923 reports
Google services: 2,694 reports
Several posts questioned how a platform of this scale could go offline, while others circulated unverified theories linking the disruption to unrelated events. The outage sparked a surge of reactions online, ranging from frustration and confusion to humour, with users sharing memes, joking about revisiting old content, and speculating about the cause. The related hashtag quickly began trending as thousands turned to social media for updates on when services would be fully restored.
YouTube is a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., which is Google's parent company. Google purchased the video-sharing site in November 2006 for $1.65 billion. Established in February 2005 by Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim, YouTube's headquarters are located in San Bruno, California.