logo
ChatGPT services fully restored after global outage: Here's what the company said

ChatGPT services fully restored after global outage: Here's what the company said

Time of India12-06-2025
's popular AI chatbot, ChatGPT, has seen its services fully restored following a significant
global outage
that impacted users worldwide. The disruption, which also affected OpenAI's
API services
and its video tool, Sora, left millions of users unable to access or utilise the AI for various tasks throughout the day.
Tired of too many ads? go ad free now
Reports of elevated error rates and latency began surfacing early Tuesday (June 10) morning, with outage tracking websites like DownDetector.com noting a sharp spike in user complaints from regions including India, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
OpenAI quickly acknowledged the problem, stating that its engineers had identified the root cause and were working on a fix. While most services were restored by early June 11, some users continued to experience issues with ChatGPT's voice mode, which OpenAI is still working to resolve.
By Thursday June 12, OpenAI's status page updated to reflect that "all impacted services have now fully recovered." On the Status page the company posted, 'We're fully functional. We're not aware of any issues affecting our systems.'
What OpenAI said about the recent ChatGPT outage
OpenAI has not yet revealed the reason behind the
ChatGPT outage
. The company has stated that it plans to release a more detailed analysis about the root cause of the issue within the next five days.
This was the longest ChatGPT outage in its history
This outage has affected users across the world. Previously, In December last year, OpenAI's popular ChatGPT chatbot, its Sora AI video generator and its developer-facing API experienced a significant outage.
At that time, the disruption lasted for around 6 hours – from 3 PM Pacific Time (3:30 am IST), with services largely back online by 9 PM PT (9.30 am IST).
'ChatGPT, API, and Sora were down today but we've recovered,' OpenAI stated in a tweet following the restoration of services.
In February, the AI chatbot global outage, which lasted for around two hours.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple CEO Tells Staff AI Is ‘Ours to Grab' in Hourlong Pep Talk
Apple CEO Tells Staff AI Is ‘Ours to Grab' in Hourlong Pep Talk

Mint

timean hour ago

  • Mint

Apple CEO Tells Staff AI Is ‘Ours to Grab' in Hourlong Pep Talk

(Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook, holding a rare all-hands meeting following earnings results, rallied employees around the company's artificial intelligence prospects and an 'amazing' pipeline of products. The executive gathered staff at Apple's on-campus auditorium Friday in Cupertino, California, telling them that the AI revolution is 'as big or bigger' as the internet, smartphones, cloud computing and apps. 'Apple must do this. Apple will do this. This is sort of ours to grab,' Cook told employees, according to people aware of the meeting. 'We will make the investment to do it.' The iPhone maker has been late to AI, debuting Apple Intelligence months after OpenAI, Alphabet Inc.'s Google, Microsoft Corp. and others flooded the market with products like ChatGPT. And when Apple finally released its AI tools, they fell flat. But Cook struck an optimistic tone, noting that Apple is typically late to promising new technologies. 'We've rarely been first,' the executive told staffers. 'There was a PC before the Mac; there was a smartphone before the iPhone; there were many tablets before the iPad; there was an MP3 player before iPod.' But Apple invented the 'modern' versions of those product categories, he said. 'This is how I feel about AI.' An Apple spokesperson declined to comment on the gathering. The hourlong meeting addressed a range of topics, including the retirement of operating chief Jeff Williams, increasing Apple TV viewership and advances in health care with features like the AirPods Pro hearing-aid technology. It also touched on donations and community service by Apple employees, the company's goal to become carbon neutral by 2030, and the impact of regulations. 'The reality is that Big Tech is under a lot of scrutiny around the world,' Cook said. 'We need to continue to push on the intention of the regulation and get them to offer that up, instead of these things that destroy the user experience and user privacy and security.' Cook often holds town hall-style chats when visiting Apple's offices around the world, but companywide meetings from the Steve Jobs Theater at headquarters are unusual. The remarks followed a blockbuster earnings report, with sales growing nearly 10% during the June quarter. That beat Wall Street expectations and eased concerns about iPhone demand and a slowdown in China. Apple still faces myriad challenges, including Trump administration tariffs and a regulatory crackdown on its business practices. The company said Thursday that tariffs would bring a $1.1 billion headwind this quarter, though Apple was upbeat about sales growth. It also said that App Store revenue rose by a percentage in the double digits last quarter, despite efforts in the EU and elsewhere to further restrict that business. Echoing comments he made during the earnings conference call, Cook told employees the company is investing in AI in a 'big way.' He said 12,000 workers were hired in the last year, with 40% of the new hires joining in research and development roles. Apple's chip development efforts, led by executive Johny Srouji, are key to the company's AI strategy, Cook said. Apple is working on a more powerful cloud-computing chip — code-named Baltra — to power artificial intelligence features, Bloomberg News has reported. It's also setting up a new AI server manufacturing facility in Houston. The meeting included Craig Federighi, senior vice president of software engineering, who discussed the future of Apple's Siri voice assistant. The company had planned to roll out a Siri overhaul as part of Apple Intelligence earlier this year, adding the ability to tap into user data to better fulfill requests. It was delayed, spurring management changes for the company's AI work. Federighi explained that the problem was caused by trying to roll out a version of Siri that merged two different systems: one for handling current commands — like setting timers — and another based on large language models, the software behind generative AI. 'We initially wanted to do a hybrid architecture, but we realized that approach wasn't going to get us to Apple quality,' Federighi said. Now, Apple is working on a version of Siri that moves to an entirely new architecture for all of its capabilities. That iteration is slated for as early as spring, Bloomberg News has reported, though Apple executives haven't confirmed a timeline other than a release next year. 'The work we've done on this end-to-end revamp of Siri has given us the results we needed,' the engineering executive told employees. 'This has put us in a position to not just deliver what we announced, but to deliver a much bigger upgrade than we envisioned. There is no project people are taking more seriously.' Federighi cited leadership changes, including putting Vision Pro creator Mike Rockwell and his headset software leadership team in charge of Siri, as a driving force in improving the product. He said Rockwell and his group have 'supercharged' the company's work in the area. In his speech, Cook also pushed employees to move more quickly to weave AI into their work and future products. 'All of us are using AI in a significant way already, and we must use it as a company as well,' Cook said. 'To not do so would be to be left behind, and we can't do that.' Employees should push to deploy AI tools faster, and urge their managers and service and support teams to do the same, he said. Cook also addressed the company's retail strategy, stressing that the current plan is to focus on opening new stores in emerging markets and upping the investment in Apple's online store. The iPhone maker is opening outlets in India, the United Arab Emirates and China this year, and is preparing to add its first location in Saudi Arabia next year. 'We need to be in more countries, and you'll see us go into more emerging markets in particular,' Cook said. That doesn't mean Apple will ignore other places, he said, but a 'disproportionate amount of growth' will be in new areas. The CEO also shared his enthusiasm about upcoming products, though he didn't get specific. 'I have never felt so much excitement and so much energy before as right now,' he said. Bloomberg News has previously reported that Apple plans to launch its first foldable iPhone next year and is also working on a stream of smart home devices. New headset products, smart glasses, a push into robotics and a redesigned iPhone for the two-decade anniversary are also underway. 'The product pipeline, which I can't talk about: It's amazing, guys. It's amazing,' Cook said. 'Some of it you'll see soon, some of it will come later, but there's a lot to see.' More stories like this are available on

ChatGPT is second most-used tool for learning new skills for students at IIT Bombay
ChatGPT is second most-used tool for learning new skills for students at IIT Bombay

Indian Express

time5 hours ago

  • Indian Express

ChatGPT is second most-used tool for learning new skills for students at IIT Bombay

ChatGPT, the popular generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) chatbot, has emerged as the second most-used tool for learning new skills among students at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Bombay—after online platforms like Coursera. This was revealed as Insight – the institute's official student media body, released its Senior Survey 2025 report on Friday. The findings are based on responses from 282 students. Of the 272 students who answered the question, 'How did you generally study/learn new skills in the institute?', 118 cited online platforms, while 65 mentioned ChatGPT. Only 9 students said they used library books—the traditional method of learning new things in university settings. Despite AI tools becoming prevalent in university settings, ChatGPT remains underutilized in certain areas. Out of 138 respondents to the question on – in which situations have you not used ChatGPT ever – 89 said that they have not used it for resume-making. Whereas only 46 said that they have not used it for assignments and projects. As respondents of the Senior Survey are soon to enter the workforce, it is important to note that 'work-life balance' and 'a career aligned with one's skill set' have emerged as top priorities—ranking higher than financial compensation. Factors like location of posting and work culture were deemed less important. Among 269 respondents for a question on important factors to consider when choosing career – 29.4 percent ranked work-life balance highest. Separately, over 40 percent of 262 respondents said a career aligned with their skill set was most important. Contrary to the perception that IIT Bombay students often move away from core engineering, the survey shows that out of the 282 students who responded to the question on their immediate plans after graduation – 67 said they would continue in core engineering, while 66 planned to stay in technology. When asked about interest in their core branch, 135 of 277 respondents said they were and still are inclined to pursue it. However, 58 said they had lost interest, while 65 admitted they were never inclined in their field of study. Whereas 19 students said that they were not interested in their core branch before but are now keen to pursue.

China is building the future of AI, not Silicon Valley, says Alibaba Cloud founder
China is building the future of AI, not Silicon Valley, says Alibaba Cloud founder

Economic Times

time6 hours ago

  • Economic Times

China is building the future of AI, not Silicon Valley, says Alibaba Cloud founder

Reuters Wang Jian, founder of Alibaba Cloud and director at Zhejiang Lab, said China is building the future of artificial intelligence (AI), not Silicon Valley. In an interview with Bloomberg, Wang said Chinese foundational AI models like Qwen and DeepSeek are much better than OpenAI's ChatGPT, adding that China is a testbed for new technology. 'Foundational models like Qwen and DeepSeek are much better than ChatGPT. So we really need to fund creative people to build applications for them. In terms of applications, we are heavily biased toward OpenAI, because everyone sees ChatGPT as the only application that can provide security,' he said. 'The Chinese market has a very important role in establishing new technology and making sure it is mature enough, positioning the country as a testbed of every new technology to get products to market,' he added. OpenAI vs Alibaba When asked about the stiff competition in the AI space, Wang said it's no less than a marathon for new players to enter the AI race, adding that healthy competition enables fast replication of the technology.'When people get together and it is not just for competition, whether you win or not, you can have a very fast iteration of the technology because of the competition.'Commenting on Silicon Valley's progress on building AI capabilities, he said just a single organisation, or individual, cannot go far in this journey. Additionally, he said that China is a country that benefits from a stable mindset. To make his point, Wang cited the example of Hangzhou, a city in China, claiming that one out of every four or five people there is a 'CEO.' Poaching war: Meta, OpenAI Wang also addressed the big pay packets being offered in Silicon Valley to hire AI to him, the driving force for any organisation should be innovation, not patents.'What's happening in Silicon Valley is not the winning formula. We need the right talent, not expensive talent,' he said.'When you are in the early stage of innovation, I don't think a patent is a problem because the only thing you need to do is to get the right person, not really an expensive person,' he added. ET reported recently that over a dozen staff at Mira Murati's AI startup, Thinking Machines Lab (TML), have been approached or offered jobs by Meta. This talent poaching follows a previous instance reported when Meta hired four AI researchers from OpenAI. The tech giant has bagged top talent from companies, including OpenAI, Anthropic, and GitHub, after top-level exits and a poor reception for its latest open-source Llama 4 model. Following the trend, the Sam Altman-led OpenAI also poached four top engineers from rival firms led by Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg last month. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. US tariff hike to hit Indian exports, may push RBI towards rate cuts Is Bajaj Finance facing its HDFC Bank moment? Tata Motors' INR38k crore Iveco buy: Factors that can make investors nervous Trump tariffs: End of road or a new journey ending Russia reliance? Stock Radar: PI Industries stock showing signs of momentum; takes support above 50-DEMA – time to buy? Long-term investing: Volatility, even threats, have limited shelf life; 5 large-caps from different sectors with upside potential of up to 38% These large- and mid-cap stocks can give more than 21% return in 1 year, according to analysts Weekly Top Picks: These stocks scored 10 on 10 on Stock Reports Plus

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store