X Reports 11,000 Problems on Thursday — Is Twitter Down Right Now

Is Twitter down right now? X saw more than 11,000 problem reports by 4:32 p.m. PT, with most complaints tied to the mobile app.

Published
2 Min Read
X Reports 11,000 Problems on Thursday — Is Twitter Down Right Now

Is Twitter down right now? X, formerly Twitter, saw a possible outage Thursday after more than 11,000 users reported problems by 4:32 p.m. PT. Most of the complaints pointed to the mobile application.

- Advertisement -

That is the clearest sign that the issue was not limited to one isolated report. For anyone trying to use X on a phone, the complaints clustered around app access rather than the platform as a whole.

X and Downdetector.com

Downdetector.com tracks outages by collecting status reports from multiple sources. That makes the number useful as an early warning signal, not a final ruling on the cause.

The complication is simple. The platform is described as experiencing a possible outage, not a fully explained service failure. The report shows disruption at scale, but it does not say why it started.

- Advertisement -

Mobile application reports

Most users reporting problems said the mobile application was affected. For a reader on a phone, that points to trouble getting into the app or using it normally rather than a narrow complaint from one desktop setup.

Anthony W. Haddad is the named person in the story, but the verified facts do not add a direct quote or explanation from him. The practical takeaway for users is to treat the outage reports as active, especially if the mobile app is the part that is failing for them.

Thursday at 4:32 p.m. PT

By 4:32 p.m. PT on Thursday, the report count had already passed 11,000. That is enough volume to show a broad service problem, and it is the number readers should watch if they are trying to judge whether the disruption is spreading or easing.

- Advertisement -

What caused the possible outage on X is not answered in the available facts.

Advertisement
Share This Article
Technology analyst writing on semiconductors, cybersecurity, and Big Tech regulation. Holds a master's degree in Computer Science from MIT.