OpenAI’s ChatGPT suddenly became unavailable and inaccessible to millions of people in the world on June 10, 2025. What began as a few scattered complaints early in the day quickly escalated into a major blackout, lasting over 12 hours and affecting users mostly in the United States, India, and the United Kingdom. The AI-powered chatbot’s outage brought about two major things: disrupting and bringing workflows to a halt, and sparking up a widespread conversation about the dependence and how much we now rely on artificial intelligence (AI) in our daily lives.
This outage was reported to have started in the early hours of June 10, with users reporting error messages, login loops, and blank chat windows. By mid-morning, reports from Downdetector, a real-time problem and outage monitoring site, indicated that it had affected so many people, most especially in certain countries – about 800 reports from India, over 1,100 from the U.S., and more than 1,450 from the U.K. alone.
It was also reported that the outage did not only affect ChatGPT, it also affected OpenAI’s video generation tool Sora and its developer API, thereby causing headaches for businesses and developers who depend on these services.
OpenAI acknowledged the outage on its official status page, stating, “Some users are experiencing elevated error rates and latency across the listed services. We are continuing to investigate this issue.”
For many people, the ChatGPT outage was more than just a minor inconvenience, seeing as the AI-powered chatbot has become deeply integrated and woven into the routines of almost everyone; students, professionals, business owners, developers, etc. From writing emails and reports to coding and brainstorming ideas, users have now come to heavily rely on the chatbot as a digital assistant that’s always ready at their beck and call.
As the hours dragged on with ChatGPT still not working, people took to using other AI-powered chatbots, such as Google’s Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude, and Deepseek. People also took to social media platforms to share their frustration and genuine concern that was littered with humour. Hashtags like #ChatGPTDown and #OpenAI sprang up on the trend table on X (fka Twitter), with users sharing memes and joking about suddenly having to “use their brain again,” one X user said.
Another X user posted, “ChatGPT is down, how will I answer if someone asks me my name.” This statement shows how frustration can be coated in humor, as the X user is primarily worried about the unavailability of the AI-powered chatbot to perform usual tasks.
One viral X post also read, “How to write an email without ChatGPT?” Beneath this humor, many expressed anxiety about lost productivity and interrupted tasks, especially those who were in the middle of important work when the outage started.
As a result, the outage quickly sparked a broader debate: Are we becoming too dependent on AI tools like ChatGPT? Because the incident highlighted just how much people have come to expect instant, reliable access to AI-powered help, as some users admitted they struggled to complete basic tasks without ChatGPT’s assistance. This has, in turn, raised concerns about the gradual loss of critical thinking and problem-solving abilities, as they have quickly become skills that are outsourced to AI-powered chatbots.
OpenAI’s engineers eventually identified and resolved the issue, and restored the service after more than 12 hours of disruption. The company cited in its status report, “elevated error rates and latency” as the problem, but did not go further in disclosing the root cause of the outage.
Ultimately, the ChatGPT outage exposed the deep and growing dependence on AI in modern life. But even more so, it now poses two important questions we are to ask ourselves – Are we going to embrace some sort of balance using this new technology while retaining our own unique capabilities? Or are we going to continue outsourcing any and every thing to AI-powered chatbots?