Is ChatGPT down? Why is ChatGPT not working? Open AI facing ...
ChatGPT − the chatbot owned by Open AI − is experiencing issues on June 10. The issues are causing partial outages across the platform throughout the morning.
Overview of the Issue
Issues began being reported around 2:35 a.m. ET with 1,038 issues being reported at 5:35 a.m. ET, according to DownDetector.com. Reports indicate 92% citing ChatGPT issues, 7% noticing app issues and 1% showing login problems.
Open AI's Response
Open AI's status page reported the following issues:
- Elevated error rates − partial outage: As of 6:59 a.m. ET, Open AI stated some users are experiencing elevated error rates and latency across the listed services. Investigation is ongoing.
- Elevated error rates on Sora − partial outage: As of 6:35 a.m. ET, OpenAI was continuing to investigate the issue for the listed services.
At 10:54 a.m., OpenAI's status page said it had identified the problem and was continuing to fully restore service. "We are continuing to work on implementing the mitigation and we are now seeing recovery on API. Full recovery across all listed services may take another few hours. We will continue to provide updates as progress is made," according to a message posted on Open AI's site.
About ChatGPT
ChatGPT is an artificial intelligence chatbot developed by U.S. company OpenAI that uses large language models from a massive dataset of text to engage in human-like conversations, generate different text formats, translate languages, and answer questions in a comprehensive way. The program launched in 2022.
ChatGPT allows users to interact with the chatting tool much like they could with another human, with the chatbot generating conversational responses to questions or prompts. Proponents say ChatGPT could reinvent online search engines and could assist with research, information writing, content creation, and customer service chatbots.
However, the service has at times become controversial, with some critics raising concerns that ChatGPT and similar programs fuel online misinformation and enable students to plagiarize.




















