At the same time, websites and apps such as Cloudflare, the Pokemon Trading Card Game, Amazon Web Services, Life360, Spotify, T-Mobile, UPS, and OpenAI were also having problems. A spokesman for global cloud company Cloudflare told CBS News earlier this afternoon, “A limited number of services at Cloudflare use Google Cloud and were impacted. We expect them to come back shortly. The core Cloudflare services were not impacted.”
A complete list of affected platforms includes:
- Discord
- Google Meet
- Snapchat
- Spotify
- Gmail
- Google Cloud
- Google Nest
- DoorDash
- Character AI
- YouTube
- Box
- Etsy
- Pokémon Trading Card Game
- Pokémon Go
- Cloudflare
- Mailchimp
- UPS
- FuboTV
- Amazon Web Services
- Rocket League
- Verizon
- Vimeo
- Shopify
- HighLevel
- Paramount+ (CBS News and Paramount+ are owned by Paramount Global)
- Claude
- D&D Beyond
- T-Mobile
- Clover
- Phasmophobia
- Ecobee
- HighLevel
- Dragon Ball
- Procore
- NPM
- Dialpad
- Dave
- OpenAI
- Microsoft Azure
- Microsoft 365
- DeviantArt
- Fitbit
- Marvel Contest of Champions
- Cursor
- Wix
- Zoom
- Google Gemini
- Spectrum
- Roblox
- AT&T
- reCAPTCHA
Personally, I noticed this afternoon that in places where I can normally access Verizon‘s 5G Ultra Wideband service, I was stuck with 4G LTE before 5G service returned. According to Downdetector, complaints about Verizon service peaked at 754 at 3:26 pm EDT compared to a baseline of 77.
Right now, Downdetector says, “User reports indicate no current problems at Verizon” as the nation’s largest carrier has 99 complaints from subscribers compared to a baseline of 66. T-Mobile, on the other hand, still has five times the number of complaints than its baseline. This explains why Downdetector still lists it as being down.