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Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Reddit reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
July 11: Problems at Reddit
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (57%)
- Errors (24%)
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Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
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Website Down | 8 hours ago |
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Sign in | 3 days ago |
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Sign in | 4 days ago |
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Website Down | 9 days ago |
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Pontius Porcius (@PPorcius) reported@YorubaCowboy @Tiger_Rider_ They reversed her goals, values, and core beliefs for reddit tier discourse. I read the original book, saw the new movie, and was let down by a cheap, plywood imitation.
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Peptide Confessions (@pepfessions) reportedAbout 3 years ago I got a wicked infection, I was prescribed intravenous antibiotics, they basically gave me diabetes… A1C from 5.2 to over 10 in a month. I tried to lose weight for about 6 months to a year after the infection was handled (used to do keto n CrossFit, ran 5k’s (just under 30 mins) and could deadlift (600lbs). Ideal performance weight was around 250, I was sitting at 350) Was prescribed Mounjaro ($25/mo). Couple months later my teen son was having health complications. The doc prescribed him a GLP and when I went to pick it up it was $1,200. I spoke to my doc… I told him I was just going to give my son my medication. We worked together through samples and eventually talking to a gym bro he said I’ve got a source, told me a price & I agreed. Fast forward to a month later exchange occurs and he hands me my first “kit”. I had no clue I was going to get 10 (vials) months worth for that price! I pin it, same side effects (quieting food noise) and reactions (mosquito bite itch) etc.. and that doc left the practice and I needed to find a new primary to work with. I buy more kits, I get sema & B12 for my gf, because she’s been going to a clinic getting her script. She goes to her “book club” and before you know it I’m doing group buys for her gf’s too. Started joining telegram and discord groups, buying bitcoin (and losing money on bitcoin), just listening to protocols and dosing and experiences with vendors… found a couple “Chinese gf’s” to ship me presents! I have an old awful nagging knee injury (torn quad 5 years old) the instagram algorithm picks it up and the reels start rolling. I start digging into Reddit and forums and next thing you know, three nights into pinning Wolverine, I sleep through the night without cramping up. Next up I’m trying SS31, and Mot-C, fixing mitochondria adding NAD, trying some RETA, Book club speaks up again… “Hey can you get that copper stuff”… (GHK-CU)… well it’ll take about a month. I put my orders in and hope to hit my parlay! I had thoroughly vetted the sources, reviewed COA’s joined group buys, let them know it’s coming from China (we call them Temu peps), most of them lived on the wilder side and had “experimented” earlier in their lives and were open to the risk, then I was alerted to a supply issue from one of my gf’s and I care, so I started sending my own things out for testing (it’s still cheaper than that $1200 for a 1 month script!) all the while talking to my new primary physician, who seems to be ok with the situation as long as I’m researching and testing. Next thing you know I got a 1/2 a fridge full of Chinese peppers and I’m at a crossroads looking into the legality of starting an LLC and going legit, watching the suppliers that are doing the things and care about their customers, not just their business. and figuring out how to mimic them and learn from their mistakes or what I’d do different? The legality of it all & is it sustainable? Or do I just keep group buying for the lil book club like in that south park episode?? Right now it’s just a lil hobby, but I’m helping people (and animals). Sourcing, Testing, organizing, shipping, labeling, storage, safety, buying crypto, customer service and satisfaction are all concerns and manageable for 5-10-25 people.. & can I do it for thousands… ???
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Jules (@jules_rewlz) reported@fnl59lo reddit thing got deleted because lots of people down voted it since theyre fans so thats your answer why I dont post it there and why people dont support hanna and everything else I guess but I still beleive pili even though she is crazy yes because they were both wrong in this
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Grumpy centrist (@grumpy_centrist) reported@DanielPriestley @DanNeidle @garyseconomics You are right, I just went down a rabbit hole reading on the Garry Reddit sub. The users are delusional and angry. The world is unfair and they are losing - they are angry and want someone else to pay. Reason and logical arguments do not stand.
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em x🥹 (@justajigsaw28) reported@BLACKHAlRLUKE it did but it got shut down and someone brought it up again on reddit last night
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Common Sense Investor (CSI) (@commonsenseplay) reportedSTOCK PICK OF THE WEEK: $WEN Wendy's. CURRENT PRICE: $7.55 MY 12–18 MONTH TARGET: $15 POTENTIAL Double from here (before dividends). RISK LEVEL: HIGH Anyone who follows me knows I do NOT buy a stock simply because Reddit is talking about it. I look at: - Who is running the company? - What are insiders doing? - Does the business generate real cash? - CAN the balance sheet survive? That process has led me to Wendy’s. I think the stock is badly wounded - but fixable! 1. LEADERSHIP ASSESSMENT: Wendy’s did not hire a career promoter. It brought back Bob Wright, a former Wendy’s Chief Operating Officer and proven restaurant operator, as CEO. Wright then reunited with Steve Cirulis as Wendy’s new CFO and Chief Strategy Officer. This is the same CEO/CFO partnership that helped turn around Potbelly. During their Potbelly tenure: - The share price increased more than 500% and they sold the business! These two have already worked together, executed a restaurant turnaround and delivered an exit for shareholders. 2. INSIDER ACTIVITY: I ALWAYS check whether insiders are quietly dumping shares while telling retail investors to remain patient. The good news: There has been no reported open-market insider selling over the past 12 months. Two Wendy’s insiders bought a combined 2,200 shares last November: - Peter Suerken bought at $7.88 - John Min bought at $8.18 but let’s not exaggerate it Those purchases totaled only approximately $20k! No recent insider dumping is a positive. Option packages given to the leadership team recently give them a reason to push the share price higher. 3. THE VALUATION At approximately $7.55: - Market cap: $1.44B - 2026 free-cash-flow guidance: $190M–$205M - 2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance: $460M–$480M - Latest quarterly dividend: $0.14 - Annualized yield: approximately 7.4% Wendy’s trades at roughly 7.3x the midpoint of guided free cash flow. That is approximately a 13.7% equity free-cash-flow yield - this is not priced like a healthy global franchise the market is currently pricing it like the turnaround fails already. 4. The Business is pretty ugly but not dead! I am not going to hide the bad numbers: - Q1 U.S. same-restaurant sales declined 7.8% - Company-operated restaurant margin fell to 11.4% - Q1 free cash flow declined 46% - Net income declined 42% Those are terrible numbers and the stock price has reflected it (down 70% the past 5 years)! But Q1 U.S. same-restaurant sales were still less bad than the 11.3% decline reported in Q4. That is not a victory, it is simply the first sign that the decline might be narrowing. Meanwhile: - International systemwide sales increased 6% - Wendy’s signed an agreement targeting up to 1,000 restaurants in China over 10 years - Project Fresh is removing weaker locations - Capital is being redirected toward better restaurants and healthier franchisee economics 5. ACTIVIST AND TAKE-PRIVATE OPTIONALITY Nelson Peltz and Trian have major ownership and board influence at Wendy’s. In its February filing, Trian said it believed Wendy’s was undervalued. It also disclosed discussions with potential financing sources, co-investors and strategic partners regarding possible transactions - including a transaction that could result in Trian acquiring control of Wendy’s and the stock being delisted. There have also been reports that Peltz has explored raising outside capital for a potential take-private offer. Let me be clear: There is NO formal offer. There may never be an offer. I am not placing a guaranteed buyout into my valuation. But when a major activist shareholder is openly speaking with financing sources that is legitimate strategic optionality would be huge upside for equity holders! 6. WALLSTREETBETS AND THE SHORT-SQUEEZE POTENTIAL WallStreetBets already has its eyes on $WEN! A viral “Save Wendy’s” post helped send the stock up as much as approximately 37% intraday on June 24. Around 202 MILLION shares traded that day, compared with a normal daily volume closer to 10 million before the rally. More importantly, the latest reported short-interest data showed: - Nearly 60M shares sold short - Approximately 38% of the public float short - Settlement date: June 30 That is an extremely crowded short trade! A credible turnaround update, meaningful insider purchase, earnings beat, dividend confirmation or take-private headline could force short sellers to cover. That could turn an ordinary fundamental rerating into a violent short squeeze. BUT READ THIS CAREFULLY: High short interest does NOT guarantee a squeeze. Short sellers are sometimes right. WallStreetBets attention can disappear overnight. And anyone buying after a vertical meme-stock move can quickly become the exit liquidity! I am happy to let WallStreetBets provide the pressure. I will NOT let WallStreetBets write my valuation, i entered my position before this became a thing. FREE CASH FLOW IS THE THESIS. THE SHORT SQUEEZE IS THE OPTIONALITY! 7. THE BIGGEST RISK: DEBT Wendy’s carries approximately $2.7B of long-term debt against a market capitalization of only approximately $1.44B. Including the current portion, gross debt is close to 6x the midpoint of guided adjusted EBITDA. This is NOT a “safe” dividend stock merely because the current yield is approximately 7.4%. The dividend can be reduced and actually probably should be. The turnaround can fail. Management may not recreate its Potbelly success. There may never be a buyout. The meme crowd can leave as quickly as it arrived. And the stock could trade below $6 before the business improves. POSITION SIZE ACCORDINGLY, like I always say (no more than 5% of your portfolio, absolute max of 10%) 8. MY $15 TARGET My target is NOT based on Wendy’s returning to its previous highs. It is NOT based on a fantasy short squeeze. And it is NOT based on blind faith in a famous brand. At $15 per share, Wendy’s would have a market capitalization of approximately $2.86B. That represents: - Approximately 14.5x midpoint 2026 free-cash-flow guidance - Roughly 11x enterprise value to guided adjusted EBITDA, using current debt and cash - Approximately 99% price appreciation from $7.55 That valuation is achievable over the next 12 - 18 months. My stock price targets: - Bear case: $5–$6 - Base case: $12 - Successful-turnaround target: $15 - Strategic deal or short squeeze: $18+ Let's see how this one plays out - I like the risk/reward!
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Degen Arty (@topsolxyz) reported$drooling update: cap slid again since last check, $1.73M → $1.21M, and this time the official account responded with a full origin poem — "Fried *** cat with the stupid stare, mouth wide open, blue drool in the air." Turns out it's a real low-res cat Reddit hunted down in a HelpMeFind thread. Lore finally arrived; the chart didn't notice. Holders up again anyway, 3,826 → 3,883. guh 🐱💧 @droolingcatsol B6f27ETGcjgGNB1fqULJbXVmw9FnL8HgBp7R83hmpump
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Phil (@swdev_pa) reportedI try to use reddit as a marketing tunnel. I really try to be gentle and not aggressive. but every f* account will get be banned by it. anyone else with that problem?
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Glenn Nieuwenhuis (@GlennNieuwenh) reportedIf you're sending all your traffic straight from the ad to your product page... you're only converting a small slice of your audience. You can't expect every potential customer to be warm enough to buy off one click. Your audience sits in stages, and each stage needs a different page. There are 5 of them, running from cold to hot: 1) Unaware. They don't even realize they have a problem. Your job at this stage is just making them see the problem exists, the selling comes later. An ad like "85% of women over 35 have this gut issue, and almost none of them know it" does exactly that. 2) Problem aware. They feel the pain but have no idea what to do about it, or they think it's just normal life. I.e something like: "Bloated by 3pm every day? You're not lazy, your gut is broken" 3) Solution aware. They know solutions exist, they just don't know which one to trust. A lot of them already tried something that failed. So you go failed-alternative: "most probiotics die in stomach acid before reaching your gut, ours actually gets there." 4) Product aware. They know your brand is one of the options, they just need a push. This is where social proof gets important. - Reviews - Raw UGC - Reddit threads - Screenshots of customer emails 5) Most aware. They already believe in the product. One little extra reason closes it, an offer, a discount, some urgency. A mistake a lot of people make is they build the whole funnel like every visitor is in stage 4 or 5. In reality, most cold traffic from a broad Meta campaign is sitting in stages 1 to 3. That's why scaling stalls, CPMs creep up, and performance gets shaky. People assume the ad broke and make 20 more, or assume the product died and go hunt a new one. Usually neither is true. The gap is the funnel sitting between the click and the checkout. Cold traffic needs an advertorial or a listicle to warm up first. Warmer traffic takes a quiz or a VSL. Hot traffic goes straight to the product page, no lander in the way, because every extra click costs you buyers who were ready. The ad only buys the click. The page is what converts it. Match the page to the stage, and a big chunk of the traffic you've been burning starts turning into customers. Here's an even more in-depth breakdown of this here:
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Timmy (@timipwo) reported@IndFootupdates @7negiashish India football reddit used to be completely against him, then a few bigger ppl in it including me got banned and a load of insta fans came in and everytbing went down the drain
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Clyde (@parklief) reportedthese past months i just said ok im never gonna make this ill let it go but funny enough like.. a sweet oomf of mine offered to help me recently and also someone on reddit but the issue is the same as always...: no writers..!...cant have a story without it being written!!
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Alexander 🇺🇸 The GOAT (@OGSteppenwolf) reported@donovanmartin5 Didn’t the OP on reddit get copyright claimed/taken down but the studio though?
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NSF Actual (@NSFoperative) reported@nuke_edmonton Any time a consensus is forming about whether something is good or cool or funny there’s a contrarian waiting in the rafters to jump down and call it Reddit
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DarthBallz (@DarthBallz6969) reported@raizumichin @BrettKollmann It wasnt a mainstream issue. It was reddit. No one cared except a couple of nerds.
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that guy (@ProspektKendall) reported@kieranv05 @iGrandTheftAuto @PLTytus Yes the only problem is people jsut went on Reddit asking for people to get the achievement. Not the same as playing and it organically happening
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szasoomf | petal 7/31 🩶 (@szaooomf) reported@God_King_Sukuna @Soul_Bleacher @TrinityAshai Reddit being the source all you slow on purpose
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ThatGuyFromHS (@ThatGuyFromHS) reported@RudeOnion Reddit is a site where terrible people make up stories so other equally terrible people can pretend they're real and talk about them.
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Toma (@thebadassdev) reportedMeet Todd. He built a great product but got 0 users because he tried all the wrong marketing channels... He forgot that Reddit has over 1 billion active users/month asking for help with their issues. To make sure you don't end up like Todd, we scrape 12,000+ subreddits/day to find your next customers automatically. Watch the video 👇
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Randall Kanna Franson (@RandallKanna) reportedIt's crazy when I see entire apps focused on growing presence in AI with just posting on Reddit. LLMs will penalize that at some point and anything else they see as hacky too. Before you dive deep into becoming the go-to answer for AI search by spamming Reddit, ask yourself: Do you deserve the top mention in AI? Are you tracking your competitors and understanding why they’re getting recommended? Does AI accurately understand what you do? Do you have a recognizable brand? Are your customers talking about your product on Reddit and not YOU? If you don’t know what to fix next, you’re just guessing. And posting on Reddit isn't a strategy.
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MagratheanUK (@MagratheanUK) reportedLong post. I've been a part of the /r/codex community, until today. It is the most toxic collection of absolute idiots I have ever seen. No other sub reddit is this awful to be a part of. I have brought up a comparison today, GPT,Claude,Grok. It was about a one-shot command and it's results, including design, devops, performance. 29+ people have told me I am an idiot. I removed the post and I cease to try to contribute to them anymore. Instead, in the last 2 hours, the entire sub is full of: SOL used up my 20x plan in 5 minutes post (impossible as it's so slow you can't do this) People bitching about basic things like SQL issues. Slagging off @openai for being **** at design. The whole community, their contributors are absolute bullshit, clickbait, hype wagon oriented idiots. Sometimes I really wish Reddit would not exist, as it's a collection of full retards at some hotspots. X isn't the best either, the problem on X is the "for you" page being useless. It is full of clickbait stuff. Nothing useful there. But here at least I can follow educated, interesting people who share and contribute. #Codex #OpenAI #GPT5
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ecomchigga (@ecomchigga) reportedi sold $63,400 worth of digital products in my first 8 months on X. the account has no name attached to it. no face. i've never filmed a video, gone on a podcast, or shown up on a livestream. every day i sit down for 14 minutes, write 3 tweets using a system, and close the laptop. 8 months ago this account had 0 followers. here's every single step. 1. went to reddit and searched "how do i" and "struggling with" inside 6 different niches. wasn't looking for what sounded interesting. was looking for the same question being asked by different people in different words. when 30 strangers independently describe the same problem, that's not a conversation. that's a price tag. 2. found a thread with 743 upvotes where someone said "why is there no simple system for selling digital products without showing your face or building a huge audience." that thread was the entire business. 3. checked gumroad for existing products in the space. found 14 products between $19 and $497. didn't scare me. competition isn't a warning sign. competition is proof people are already spending money on this exact problem. 4. picked the one angle none of the existing products covered well: the backend. everybody was teaching "create a product and post about it." nobody was teaching what happens between the tweet and the sale. the capture, the warmup, the community layer, the conversion. the invisible machine behind the revenue. 5. opened google docs. wrote the complete answer like a long text to a friend who was stuck and needed the full picture in one read. didn't worry about formatting, design, fonts, or section headers. just wrote until the problem was solved on the page. 6. organized it into 4 sections: what the backend actually is, why most info sellers skip it and stay broke, the step-by-step build, and real examples with real numbers from accounts already doing it. every section earns the next one. no filler. 7. kept it at 11 pages. short enough to finish in one sitting. detailed enough that the reader can build the whole system without googling anything else. people don't finish long courses. people finish short guides that respect their time. 8. added screenshots wherever a step needed visual proof. not decorative images. functional ones. "here's what the telegram should look like when it's set up correctly. here's what the bio should say. here's what the pinned message structure looks like." 9. exported as PDF. made a cover in canva using a free template. 8 minutes. the cover looked rough and it outperformed every product on gumroad with professional design in my niche. ugly products with real solutions outsell pretty products with surface-level advice every single time. 10. uploaded to gumroad. free until your first sale, then 10% per transaction. wrote a product title that describes the outcome the buyer gets, not what the file contains. "how to build a backend that sells" not "digital product guide v2." 11. priced the first product at $39. this is the impulse zone. under $34 and people assume the product is worthless. over $67 and they hesitate long enough to talk themselves out of it. $39 sits in the window where people buy before the rational brain kicks in. 12. pulled 2 pages from the guide and turned them into a free version. this is the lead magnet. it solves one small piece of the problem well enough that the reader trusts you to solve the rest. it's not a teaser. it's a functioning tool that happens to make them want the full version. 13. created a free telegram group. pinned the free guide at the top. pinned the $39 product directly below it. that's the entire storefront. two pins. no sales page. no website. no funnel software. 14. set up the telegram so new members land in a room where existing buyers are posting screenshots of their first sales, asking questions about implementation, and sharing what's working. this is the most important step on this entire list. the community does the selling. you don't convince anyone. the proof from other buyers does it for you. every new screenshot is a sales pitch you didn't write. 15. built a faceless X account. profile picture with no face in it. bio explains who i help and what result i deliver in one line. bio link goes directly to the telegram. not to a landing page. not to a linktree. not to a website. telegram. one click. one destination. every additional link between the tweet and the product is a leak where buyer intent bleeds out. 16. used an aged account. 6+ months old. the algorithm runs new-account suppression that buries fresh accounts for the first 60-90 days regardless of how good the content is. buying or using an aged account skips the penalty entirely. this one decision saves 2-3 months of invisible posting. 17. found 12 accounts in my niche between 10K and 50K followers. screenshotted their 50 best-performing tweets each. studied the hooks, the formats, the lengths, and the structures that consistently pulled views. this library becomes the foundation the entire content system is built on. 18. loaded everything into a Claude project. 3 files: the reference bank of 170+ viral tweets with view counts attached, a voice profile with 23 rules that strip every pattern that makes AI content detectable, and formatting rules that force sentence length variation and paragraph rhythm changes. Claude doesn't guess what performs. it reads what already performed and inherits the structure. 19. the voice profile is the piece that separates AI tweets nobody can detect from AI tweets everyone scrolls past. it strips em dashes, round numbers, uniform sentence rhythm, the reversal structures every model defaults to, and roughly 40 vocabulary words that appear at dramatically higher frequency in AI output than human text. the system catches everything your brain would flag as synthetic before the tweet is posted. 20. used Claude to generate 3 tweets per day. one prompt per tweet. not a paragraph of instructions. one clean line. long prompts make the model optimize for satisfying a checklist instead of writing something good. the reference bank teaches structure. the voice profile strips the tells. 14 minutes for all 3 tweets. done. 21. scheduled through TweetHunter. posting times locked at 8am, 1pm, and 8pm with 4-6 hour gaps between each. the spacing defeats the algorithm's session decay penalty. tweets posted too close together compete with each other for the same audience window. 22. never posted more than 3 times per day. the algorithm runs a penalty called the AuthorDiversityScorer. it applies exponential decay to every additional post from the same author in someone's feed. your 4th tweet of the day gets roughly 20% of the reach your 1st one got. most people posting 5-8 times a day are actively punishing their own account. 23. made 1 of the 3 daily tweets a CTA. structure: first 70-80% is pure value strong enough to bookmark without the ask. something the reader would save even if there was no product attached. then: "comment [KEYWORD] and i'll send you the free guide. must be following + RT." the value earns the ask. without it the CTA is just noise. 24. set up TweetHunter's silent auto-DM. when someone comments the keyword they get the telegram link automatically via DM. no public reply. this part matters: public auto-DM replies get flagged as spam behavior by the algorithm and tank your reach score. silent delivery only. 25. replied publicly to every commenter for the first 30-60 minutes after every single post. this is the highest-leverage action available on the platform and almost nobody does it on purpose. each author reply fires a 75x engagement weight in the algorithm. one reply from you to a commenter is worth more than 75 likes from strangers. 26. that 30-minute window exists because X's engagement cache refreshes every 5 minutes for new tweets but only every 10 minutes for tweets older than 30 minutes. engagement velocity in the first half hour propagates through the scoring system at 2x speed. after 30 minutes the same reply, the same repost, the same bookmark is worth half as much to the algorithm. 27. spent 20 minutes every morning in DMs answering questions from new telegram members. kept answers short and useful. when someone asked something the paid product covers in depth: "i cover this inside the full system, i don't normally go this deep in DMs but i can show you what's inside if you want." this isn't a pitch. it's a boundary. the difference matters. 28. used yes-stacking in longer DM conversations. asked 4 questions the lead can only say yes to before the product ever comes up. "are you trying to sell digital products?" yes. "do you already have an audience, even small?" yes. "would it help to see the exact backend setup that's generating sales for other people in your position?" yes. "want me to show you what's inside?" yes. by the time price is mentioned they've already decided without realizing it. 29. for anyone who said "let me think about it" i replied "honestly i don't think you're ready for this yet, let's revisit in a few months." took the sale away. this triggers near-miss psychology. 30-50% of stalled conversations closed same day. the brain treats a disappearing opportunity completely differently than a patient one. 30. posted proof constantly. every single gumroad notification screenshotted and shared. every testimonial. every result. every DM from a buyer saying "this worked." nothing on earth sells a digital product like receipts from real people who already bought it and got results. 31. raised the price $5 after every 20 sales. $39 became $44 became $49 became $57. same product. same pages. growing proof. more perceived value with every bump. the product gets more expensive precisely because more people can confirm it works. 32. self-reposted top performing tweets at 12-24 hours with no penalty. re-posted them fresh after 48+ hours when the algorithm's Thunder cache resets and the tweet re-enters the candidate pool as brand new content. one great tweet performs 3 separate times if you time the reposts correctly. 33. wrote one long-form X article per week. articles pull 300K-1M+ views in 2026 because they trigger dwell time (weighted +10 in the scoring) and bookmarks (weighted 10x). highest-reach format on the platform right now and most creators aren't using it. 34. never posted off-topic. not once. one viral meme tweet feels good but it mathematically drifts your content vector in the algorithm's embedding space. every on-niche post after it reaches fewer people because the system is less certain what your account is about. short-term views, long-term damage. 35. stayed consistent even when growth felt invisible. the algorithm runs something called Phoenix prediction scoring. it scores your posts based on your recent engagement history before a single person sees the new tweet. going silent for a week collapses the baseline. recovery takes 5-10 consecutive strong posts before reach returns to where it was. consistency isn't motivational. it's a mechanical input. 36. the algorithm also runs a sentiment layer through Grok. positive, constructive, insider-toned content gets wider distribution. combative, aggressive, or inflammatory tweets get reach-suppressed even when engagement is high. contempt works. combat doesn't. 37. added a $497 course behind the $39 front-end product. 2-4% of $39 buyers upgrade within 30 days without being pitched directly. the front-end product proves you know what you're talking about. the backend product captures the people who want everything. 38. added a $5K 1-on-1 partnership behind the $497 course. one person applies every 2-3 months. a single close on this tier changes the entire math of the business overnight and pays for 6+ months of operating costs in one transaction. 39. batched all content creation on sundays. one 90-minute session producing the full week of tweets through the Claude system. the business runs the remaining 6 days and 22.5 hours without me touching it. 40. tracked what actually drove replies and bookmarks and cut everything else. the algorithm's signal weights are public knowledge and most creators have never looked at them: likes are 1x. bookmarks are 10x. link clicks are 11x. profile clicks are 12x. replies are 13.5x. reposts are 20x. author replies are 75x. optimizing for likes is optimizing for the cheapest signal on the entire scoreboard. the tools: Claude: $20/month (content engine with reference system) TweetHunter: $49/month (scheduling + silent auto-DM) Gumroad: free until first sale, then 10% per transaction Telegram: free Canva: free Tally: free (application form for $5K partnership tier) total monthly cost: $69. total daily time: 14 minutes. the timeline: week 1-2: setup, first tweets, finding the rhythm, $0 month 1: 800 followers, first CTA tweets, $227 month 2: 2,400 followers, telegram growing, CTA comments climbing, $1,600 month 3: 4,100 followers, telegram compounding, first $497 course sale, $3,800 month 6: 9,200 followers, backend fully operational, $6,100/month month 8: 11,500 followers, all 3 product tiers converting, $7,400/month consistent the first $227 took 6 weeks. the jump from $227 to $7,400 took 6 months. the system compounds because the telegram grows every single day and never shrinks. more members means more proof. more proof means higher conversion. higher conversion on the same traffic means revenue climbs without the effort climbing with it. i put all 40 steps into a full course. 45 modules. way more detail than fits in a tweet. the Claude prompts, the DM scripts word for word, the telegram setup, the pricing framework, the algorithm breakdown, the voice profile build, the content system, every template i use. it's called the X Method. $50. comment METHOD and i'll send you the link. must be following + RT.
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Shrimpy Robbins (@shrimpyrobbins) reported@AlternateA65121 @helpless_turlte @TheCinesthetic She doesn’t have a point. She can’t understand how cringe a line is to others because she spends time reading Reddit and Tumblr goyposts and fanfic so something as terrible as the “virgins can die now” line is like how Michael Bay’s Transformers was to little boys in the 2000’s
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natalie ★ (@N0SENSEOFTIME) reported@lvesny @handsatthepiano you’re 20 years old, please act like it. if you cannot grasp that this man did something wrong when multiple people unrelated to the reddit poster have confirmed what happened i think the problem lies with you at this point. i hope your mind gets better.
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Shann³ (@shannholmberg) reportedwhat a marketing engineer is a marketer who takes dev and agent tooling, tests it on client work, and builds it into a system that runs without them standing over it code is a commodity now, you can ship almost anything fast, so the job becomes more about judgment & taste behind the output the 5 things that separate a marketing engineer from a marketer using AI: 1. the company brain context specced out by vertical, the knowledge layer every agent reads before it starts work. agents get their taste here, and without it they start from zero every session and hand you generic work what goes in it: > source-of-truth docs, positioning, offers, pricing, ICP, brand rules > the SOPs and workflows a closed agent can run on > examples of what good looks like, the best articles, campaigns, landing pages, each with a note on why it is good > decision logs, what you tried, what you killed, what not to reopen one brain per vertical, a SaaS build and a local-services build never share context. the why on each example is what transfers taste to the agent, a good example with no reason attached doesn´t give any value in the end 2. the harness the infrastructure around the agents, what makes the speed possible. it lets you open a new project and be running in seconds, the setup already built > CLAUDE .md and agents .md files that set the rules once > project templates for spinning up a new build in claude or codex fast > open-loop templates for exploratory work, closed-loop templates for verifiable work, both ready to clone > .env files already specced with the keys and connectors the agent reaches for > SOPs written for the agent to follow step by step for content the harness is a voice .md, a file of what to avoid, examples of your best posts, and connections to typefully, the X API, and a research layer like grok or a reddit scraper. the agent drafts inside that harness and comes out sounding like you 3. operations where you do the work, the surface you steer the agents from > the claude or codex app for a session at your desk > a terminal multiplexer like CMUX to keep several agents open at once > local for quick jobs, a VPS for anything that has to stay up > one folder on the VPS holds the whole setup, a one-word ssh gets you in > the sessions live on the server, reachable from your phone a VPS means the work does not stop when you close the laptop, the agents keep working around the clock and you manage them from anywhere 4. model routing knowing which model does which job and steering the work to it > fable 5 to plan and architect the build, the expensive thinking up front > cheaper and open models for the volume work underneath > sonnet, opus, or a codex build where the task fits the model > a judge model to score the output before it ships you plan with the model that has the judgment, then hand execution to the ones that are fast and cheap 5. taste judgment on both sides, the creative and the infrastructure. this is the one you cannot download > knowing what good looks like before it ships > spotting what to leave unbuilt even when you can build it fast > catching the slop that passes a spec but comes out generic > telling when the 60% version is fine and when it needs the last 20%
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Bl43ch (@Bl43ch) reported@hood_sanctuary you can google search the root cause for kernal 124 or just paste the error name and see what google says, reddit threads also help ig
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dodomtt (@dodomttpoker) reported@amit32883 When I mentioned in a reddit comment that I'm consider becoming a part-time poker coach someday down the line, random commenters seemed to take personal offense at the idea bc I flagged I didn't yet have much of a proven track record but thought that will likely sort itself out in time. Like, they got offended EVEN THOUGH I said that by the time I would offer coaching, I probably would have that track record already anyway. Weird thing to get offended about. In any case, but then when people WITH an established track record offer coaching, it becomes "why are they coaching instead of playing" :D Can't win either way. On GTO Lab specifically, they are truly excellent, Nick Petrangelo may be running poorly in Tritons but he's been successful in poker avenues generally and my favorite coach for years, I haven't quite gotten that same level of depth in analysis of poker mechanics anywhere else. I'd probably pay some money for coaching content of that sort even if I wouldn't be allowed to play poker anymore -- it's just oddly fascinating for my brain. (And Daniel Dvoress has been crushing it at Triton events, and he's a very likeable coach there too!)
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DON (@mainhundon36) reportedInstagram & reddit are totally gone. People are retarded there, you cannot counter things there like Twitter and there is a coordinated campaign going on to spread misinformation & show modi as problem of everything. If action is not taken soon, this is going to be very harmful.
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Andrew Wilkinson (@StartupsILike) reportedDiscord was built for gamers and became the infrastructure for the internet. Jason Citron had already sold a gaming company, OpenFeint, to a Japanese firm for $104 million before he was 30. He started Hammer & Chisel in 2012 to build games, but the games didn't work. What worked was the internal communication tool they'd built to coordinate while making them. Gamers needed a way to talk while playing existing options were laggy, complicated, or expensive. Discord launched in 2015 as a free, low latency voice and text chat platform built specifically for gaming. It spread through gaming communities on Reddit and grew almost entirely by word of mouth. Then it stopped being just about gaming. Study groups started using it, then artists, writers, NFT communities, sports fans, and investment groups. The server and channel structure turned out to work for any community that wanted a persistent, organized space to talk. By 2020 Discord had 100 million registered users, and by 2021 it had 150 million. Microsoft offered to acquire it for around $12 billion. Discord turned it down. The company raised funding at a $15 billion valuation instead. Discord now has over 200 million monthly active users across virtually every interest category imaginable. The failed game studio accidentally built one of the most important communication platforms of the last decade.
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Umar (@umar_xbt) reportedThreadguy destroys Ed Zitron's thesis that LLMs are a bad and useless product. He reveals that he still relies on AI every single day, calling it one of the greatest products the human race has ever created. He admits it has not made him a trillion dollars or radically revolutionized his life, but he argues it serves an infinite purpose by completely replacing his need for Google and Reddit. Instead of digging through forums for personalized advice, he uses AI to solve highly specific problems on the fly without even realizing it. If he experiences sharp pain during a lift, he simply feeds the AI his exact routine, notes his specific labrum injury, and gets an instant answer on how to finish chest day safely. To him, it is the ultimate personalized Google search.
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Allen George (@AllenGeorge) reported@Reddit The person or bot who reviewed my appeal on a warning on my account did not bother to read it or do a basic google search that would’ve confirmed my recommendation as the number one recommended way to deal with a problem the person asked for help with.