ChatGPT outage triggers memefest: ‘I’m forced to use my own brain’ | Trending

OpenAI’s popular AI chatbot, ChatGPT, is currently down for many users across the globe. According to Downdetector, a site that monitors online service disruptions, hundreds of users have filed complaints over the past few hours, with more than 500 reports coming from India alone. Users have reported various issues, including being completely unable to log in and encountering network errors on both the web and mobile app versions of ChatGPT. OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, has not issued a statement yet.(X/@linkanpatidar0) Meanwhile, as soon as the platform went down, social media platforms were flooded with reactions. Frustrated users shared their experiences online, with many resorting to memes and jokes about being stuck without the chatbot to help them finish tasks. Some even humorously questioned how they would survive the workday without their AI assant. “I don’t even know what to write as caption for this post about ChatGPT is down after ChatGPt is down,” wrote one user. “#ChatGPT is down, and now I need to draft my own emails. Dark times i tell you!” commented another. “ChatGPT is down and I’m forced to use my own brain,” wrote a third user. “Now that ChatGPT is down, I have to write everything manually. Damn,” jokingly wrote another. OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, has not issued a statement yet. Past outagesChatGPT has faced multiple outages in the past. In January 2025, a global access failure disrupted users in countries including Spain, Argentina, and the United States for more than three hours. A similar glitch hit the platform in December 2024, causing widespread downtime. Another major outage occurred in February 2025, when users across the globe were unable to access the service, with Downdetector recording over 22,000 reports. More recently, in the first week of September 2025, ChatGPT experienced brief disruptions, including a 10-minute outage on September 3 and additional incidents on September 2 and September 1.




