logo
Google Cloud Outage Disrupts Global Services Including Gmail, Spotify, and OpenAI

Google Cloud Outage Disrupts Global Services Including Gmail, Spotify, and OpenAI

Hans Indiaa day ago

In the early hours of Thursday, a sudden and widespread disruption stemming from Google Cloud sent shockwaves across the internet. Popular platforms including Gmail, Spotify, OpenAI tools like ChatGPT, and smart home devices powered by Google Home and Nest experienced unexpected outages, leaving millions of users unable to access essential digital services.
The root cause of the incident was traced to a severe malfunction in Google Cloud's Identity and Access Management (IAM) system—a backbone service that governs authentication and user access permissions across apps relying on Google Cloud. When IAM faltered, services that depended on it for user verification and login functionality began to fail in rapid succession.
Reports of service disruptions started emerging around 1:51 PM ET, as users around the world noticed erratic behaviours across multiple platforms. Some encountered strange error messages, while others faced complete lockouts from their accounts or saw smart home devices become unresponsive.
High-profile services like Gmail, Spotify, ChatGPT, and various smart home ecosystems were among the most visible victims of the outage. For many, the blackout highlighted just how deeply embedded cloud platforms are in daily life—from email and music to AI tools and home automation.
While users and tech leaders began flagging the problem across social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter) early on, an official confirmation from Google was slower to arrive. It wasn't until 6:16 PM ET that Google posted an update on its Cloud status page, acknowledging the issue as a service-impacting event caused by IAM-related failures. Shortly after the update, recovery efforts began in earnest, and most services were back online by late evening.
The ripple effect of the glitch also touched other infrastructure players. Cloudflare, which handles content delivery and internet security for numerous websites, confirmed disruptions as well—though it noted that only those parts of its services relying on Google Cloud were affected.
Replit CEO Amjad Masad was among the first to publicly identify Google Cloud as the root of the issue. Following this early warning, Google confirmed that "multiple GCP products are experiencing impact due to Identity and Access Management Service Issue."
The incident has reignited debate over the increasing centralization of the internet's architecture. With so many critical services concentrated on a few massive cloud platforms, even a small glitch can cause massive, cascading failures across the globe. While Thursday's outage was resolved in a matter of hours, it has sparked renewed calls for decentralized and more resilient internet infrastructure, capable of weathering future system-level failures more gracefully.
As cloud services continue to grow in complexity and dominance, the need for diversified, fail-safe systems is becoming more urgent—a sentiment echoed by experts and users alike following this latest digital disruption.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Barbie, UNO to get tech makeover? Mattel partners with Sam Altman's OpenAI to bring AI-powered products
Barbie, UNO to get tech makeover? Mattel partners with Sam Altman's OpenAI to bring AI-powered products

Mint

timean hour ago

  • Mint

Barbie, UNO to get tech makeover? Mattel partners with Sam Altman's OpenAI to bring AI-powered products

AI-based services, Studio Ghibli images, and now AI-powered toys, games including the childhood staples like Barbie and UNO? Barbie-maker Mattel has teamed up with Sam Altman led company OpenAI to develop toys and games with artificial intelligence. The first of the AI-powered products is slated to hit the shelves later this year, the company announced on Thursday. Mattel, which is also known for their iconic Hot Wheels and UNO cards, plans to 'bring the magic of AI to age-appropriate play experiences with an emphasis on innovation, privacy, and safety,' the company said in a statement. The Mattel-OpenAI partnership comes as toy manufacturers face sluggish demand, with consumers tightening their budgets amid the economic uncertainty triggered by US President Trump's evolving trade policies. Over the last year, Mattel has relied on producing films, TV shows and mobile games based on its products such as Hot Wheels and Barbie to offset a slowdown in its core toy business, reported Reuters. Additionally, several toy manufacturers in the US have slowed innovation and faced rising production costs due to the tariffs, with many postponing launches, laying off employees to navigate the uncertain times, reported AP. According to a Wall Street Journal report, Trump's raising of tariffs on China to 145% in April 2025 also triggered a crisis for doll makers—many halted production or raised prices, with authorities granting a temporary reprieve. Consumers are expected to see fewer and more expensive dolls this Christmas, as most dolls sold in the US are made in China. As part of the partnership, Mattel will also use tools like ChatGPT Enterprise to boost creativity and streamline operations across the company. By tapping into OpenAI's AI capabilities, Mattel aims to reimagine how fans can experience and interact with its cherished brands, with careful consideration to ensure positive, enriching experiences, the Sam Altman led company said. 'With OpenAI, we're unlocking tools that will transform how we create, imagine, and innovate—both for kids and behind the scenes,' said OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap. Last month, Mattel withdrew its annual forecast and said it would raise prices on some products sold domestically in a bid to mitigate higher supply chain costs.

Instagram Adds Real-Time Spotify Sharing Feature; How To Share Spotify Music In Notes
Instagram Adds Real-Time Spotify Sharing Feature; How To Share Spotify Music In Notes

India.com

time3 hours ago

  • India.com

Instagram Adds Real-Time Spotify Sharing Feature; How To Share Spotify Music In Notes

Instagram Spotify Song: Instagram, a Meta-owned platform, is rolling out a new feature ahead of World Music Day on June 21 that will allow users to share the music they're currently listening to on Spotify directly through Notes. The new feature will display the live track being played on Spotify, including the song title and artist. It builds on Instagram's ongoing collaboration with Spotify, which began last year with the introduction of the 'Add to Spotify' button. Now, users can give friends a live peek into their music choices, making it easier to connect over shared tastes or discover new tracks. Notably, Notes, the short text updates that appear above DMs, have supported music sharing on the platform since last year. Oh btw, now you can share what you're listening to on @Spotify to Notes (P.S. Try streaming a Tyler, The Creator song to your Notes this week for a surprise ) — Instagram (@instagram) June 13, 2025 The company made these changes as part of a broader push by Instagram to encourage users to 'take creative chances,' particularly as the platform marks its 15th year. Adding further, Instagram is also planning to introduce the option for users to rearrange their posts in the profile grid. Meta-owned platform has made Trial Reels available to everyone, allowing users to test their Reels with non-followers first. How To Link Spotify And Instagram Go to Instagram Settings Navigate to Settings > Your app and media > App website permissions and link your Spotify account. How To Share Spotify Music In Instagram Notes: Step 1: Tap the music icon while creating a new Note on Instagram. Step 2: Link your Spotify account if you're using this feature for the first time. Step 3: If a song is already playing on Spotify, it will automatically appear in your Note. Step 4: Not playing anything? Your Note will update with the next song you start within 30 minutes. Step 5: Add optional text along with the song, then hit 'Share' to post your Note.

Scale AI may lose partnership with Microsoft, Google, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Elon Musk's xAI after Facebook's $14 billion investment
Scale AI may lose partnership with Microsoft, Google, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Elon Musk's xAI after Facebook's $14 billion investment

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Scale AI may lose partnership with Microsoft, Google, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Elon Musk's xAI after Facebook's $14 billion investment

Google, the largest customer of AI data-labeling firm Scale AI, plans to end its relationship with the company following news that rival Facebook-parent company Meta is acquiring a 49% stake, a report said. Google had reportedly intended to pay Scale AI around $200 million this year for human-labeled training data, essential for developing advanced AI models like its ChatGPT competitor, Gemini. Citing five sources familiar with the matter, news agency Reuters reported that the move stems from concerns that Meta's significant investment could expose Google's proprietary AI research and roadmap to a key competitor. Reportedly, the search giant has already begun discussions with several of Scale AI's rivals this week, looking to shift this substantial workload. Not only Google, The unease isn't limited to Google. Other major tech companies using Scale AI's services, including Microsoft and Elon Musk's xAI, are also reportedly distancing themselves. The report also says that OpenAI, another significant AI developer, had already scaled back its engagement with Scale AI months ago, though its spending was considerably less than Google's. However, OpenAI's CFO recently stated that the company would continue working with Scale AI as one of its many data vendors. Why these companies are scaling back their involvement in Scale AI The primary concern among companies competing with Meta in cutting-edge AI model development is the risk of their research priorities and technical blueprints being exposed to a direct rival. Customers often share proprietary data and even prototype products with Scale AI's workers for data-labeling services. With Meta now holding a substantial stake, these AI firms fear their chief competitor could gain sensitive business and technical intelligence. What it may mean for Scale AI For Scale AI, this potential loss of Google's business comes as a blow, despite its recent valuation jump to $29 billion following Meta's investment (up from $14 billion pre-deal). Scale AI's core business heavily relies on a few major customers, making it vulnerable to such departures. While Scale AI intends to continue operations, its CEO, Alexandr Wang, along with some employees, are moving to Meta. The bulk of Scale AI's revenue comes from providing human trainers to annotate complex datasets for generative AI model makers, a service that can cost as much as $100 per annotation for sophisticated examples. Its largest revenue stream is from its partnerships with generative AI model makers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store