Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

Business

Google Gemini Down Today? User Experiences Widespread Outage, Affecting Hundreds of Users Worldwide

Published

on

Google Gemini AI is Here

Google’s artificial intelligence chatbot Gemini went down for a significant number of users on Wednesday, prompting widespread reports of access issues and error messages across multiple regions as the service faced technical disruptions.

The outage was first highlighted by service monitoring accounts and quickly confirmed by users on social media. Many reported encountering error code 1076 when attempting to use the Gemini app or web interface, with complaints spanning the United States, Europe, Brazil, Japan and other countries. The problems appeared to affect both free and paid Pro plan subscribers.

Users described the service as unresponsive or displaying persistent error notifications when trying to generate responses, particularly for image-related tasks or complex queries. The disruptions came at a time when reliance on AI tools for productivity, research and creative work continues to grow rapidly.

Scope and User Impact

Advertisement

Reports indicated the outage impacted hundreds of users, though the exact number remains unclear as Google had not issued an official statement by mid-afternoon. Service tracking sites and community forums showed elevated reports of downtime starting in the morning hours.

Complaints ranged from complete inability to access the platform to intermittent failures and slower response times. Some users noted the issues persisted for several hours, disrupting workflows for professionals, students and casual users alike who depend on Gemini for daily tasks.

The timing of the outage coincided with a busy period for AI adoption, as businesses and individuals increasingly integrate tools like Gemini into creative, analytical and customer service operations. Even brief interruptions can create significant friction in time-sensitive environments.

Google’s Response and Technical Context

Advertisement

Google has not yet released a detailed explanation for the disruption. The company typically addresses major outages through its status dashboard or official channels once the scope is fully understood. Past incidents with Gemini and other Google services have often been resolved within a few hours through backend fixes or capacity adjustments.

Gemini, Google’s flagship conversational AI model, powers various features across Search, Workspace and consumer applications. The service has seen rapid expansion since its launch, with continuous updates aimed at improving reasoning, multimodality and integration with other Google products.

Technical experts suggest the outage could stem from high demand, server configuration issues or a temporary glitch in the underlying infrastructure. AI systems require substantial computational resources, and scaling challenges occasionally lead to intermittent availability problems during peak usage or maintenance windows.

Broader Implications for AI Reliability

Advertisement

The incident highlights ongoing challenges in maintaining reliable AI services at global scale. As millions of users turn to tools like Gemini for everything from coding assistance to creative brainstorming, even short outages can have outsized effects on productivity and trust.

Industry observers note that reliability will become an increasingly important competitive factor as AI adoption matures. Companies investing heavily in redundant infrastructure and rapid response capabilities are better positioned to maintain user confidence during disruptions.

For Google, maintaining uptime for Gemini is critical to its broader AI ambitions and competition with rivals like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude. The company has emphasized responsible development and robust performance in recent announcements.

User Reactions and Workarounds

Advertisement

On social media, users expressed frustration mixed with humor, with many sharing screenshots of error messages. Some turned to alternative AI tools during the outage, while others waited for resolution. International users reported similar experiences, suggesting the issue was not limited to specific regions or data centers.

Community forums and support threads filled with reports of the problem, with users exchanging tips on troubleshooting steps such as clearing cache, trying different browsers or devices, and checking Google’s status pages. Many expressed hope for a quick fix given the service’s importance to daily routines.

Company Background and Recent Developments

Gemini has undergone several iterations since its debut, with Google rolling out enhanced versions featuring improved multimodal capabilities, better reasoning and integration with products like Search and Workspace. The service is available in free and paid tiers, with the latter offering higher limits and priority access.

Advertisement

The outage comes amid Google’s continued push into AI across its ecosystem, including new features in Android, Pixel devices and cloud services. The company has invested billions in data centers and model training to support growing demand.

Looking Ahead

As of late Wednesday, partial recovery appeared underway for some users, though full restoration timelines remained uncertain. Google is expected to provide more details once engineers fully diagnose and resolve the underlying issue.

Incidents like this serve as reminders of the infrastructure demands of modern AI systems. For users, they underscore the value of having backup tools and not relying exclusively on any single platform for critical tasks.

Advertisement

The event may also prompt discussions around service level agreements and transparency expectations for consumer-facing AI products. As these technologies become more embedded in professional and personal life, reliability standards are likely to rise in importance alongside capability improvements.

Google Gemini’s temporary disruption affected a notable number of users globally on June 10, highlighting both the popularity of the service and the complexities of operating large-scale AI systems. The company’s swift response will be key to maintaining user trust as the platform continues to evolve.

Users experiencing ongoing issues are advised to check Google’s official status dashboard or support channels for the latest updates. As AI tools play an ever-larger role in daily workflows, such outages, though inconvenient, also provide opportunities for platforms to demonstrate resilience and commitment to service quality.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

Welsh Government to hold future of skills summit

Published

on

Business Live

The summit will be held this autumn as part of a reform of vocational skills training in Wales

Deputy Minister for Skills and Tertiary Education Cefin Campbell.(Image: Plaid Cymru)

The Welsh Government has confirmed a future skills summit as part of its reform of vocational skills training in Wales.

Deputy Minister for Skills and Tertiary Education, Cefin Campbell, said that with a skills audit – a Plaid Cymru Senedd Election manifesto pledge- under way, the summit will be held this autumn.

Advertisement

It will bring together employers, educators, training providers, and policymakers to shape plans for reform of vocational skills training in Wales.

Mr Campbell said: “We are at a pivotal moment for skills in Wales. Wales has real strengths, a talented workforce, strong employers and excellent training providers.

“We need to make sure those strengths are fully realised. The skills audit we are undertaking will give us a clearer picture of where the gaps are and where the opportunities lie. The future skills summit will be a chance for employers, learners, and providers to help shape the reforms that follow. This is genuinely collaborative work.”

Lisa Mytton strategic director of National Training Federation for Wales , the representative body for organisations or individuals involved in the delivery of learning in the workplace, said: “This announcement is an important step towards building a skills system in Wales that is ambitious, responsive, and future focused.

Advertisement

“Apprenticeships have a vital role to play in delivering the skilled workforce our economy needs.

“The skills audit and future skills summit provide a valuable opportunity to ensure apprenticeships continue to evolve, remain relevant to the needs of employers and create clear pathways into sustainable, high-quality employment.”

Continue Reading

Business

John Delaney’s Forbright valued at $870 million after shares fall in debut

Published

on

John Delaney’s Forbright valued at $870 million after shares fall in debut


John Delaney’s Forbright valued at $870 million after shares fall in debut

Continue Reading

Business

Why does your World Cup pint cost so much this time round?

Published

on

Why does your World Cup pint cost so much this time round?

Pub landlords explain why they have no choice but to charge more.

Continue Reading

Business

2026 elections ad spend projected to reach record: AdImpact

Published

on

2026 elections ad spend projected to reach record: AdImpact

The 2026 midterm election cycle could surpass the 2024 presidential cycle to reach record advertising spend for any U.S. election, according to a new report from advertising intelligence company AdImpact.

This year’s races are projected to reach $11.6 billion in ad spend, making it the most expensive cycle ever and eclipsing the $11.2 billion spent on ads for the 2024 election between now-President Donald Trump and former Vice President Kamala Harris, AdImpact estimates. The new projection is a $795 million increase from a previous projection made last year.

The midterm cycle is set to be more intense than previous cycles, with Republicans controlling both chambers of Congress. The 2022 midterm cycle drew $8.9 billion in ad spend, according to AdImpact. If the projection holds, the 2026 ad spend would be 30% higher than the last midterm election.

“From record-setting races and surging party committee war chests to a competitive landscape that continues to expand, all indicators point to 2026 being the most expensive political advertising cycle in history,” the report read.

Advertisement

AdImpact said it expects $5.6 billion to be spent on broadcast, $1.4 billion on cable, $2.6 billion on connected TV and $1.68 billion on digital.

Advertising remains a key revenue driver for media companies, with sports, live events and news attracting the most spending. Elections, particularly those that are hotly contested or in battleground states, often bring in some of the highest ad revenue for the owners of local broadcast stations across the country.

Broadcast TV remains one of the largest forces in political advertising, according to the report, comprising nearly half of the total cycle spending and driven almost entirely by state races.

States seeing the largest spend overall include California, Texas, Michigan and Ohio. Michigan, Ohio and Texas all feature competitive Senate races, while California has an expensive governor’s race.

Advertisement

AdImpact estimated that through June 1, political ad spending has reached $4 billon, a 46% increase over the same point in the 2024 presidential election cycle.

“Much of that surge is driven by a concentrated set of high-profile, high-dollar contests that materialized earlier in the cycle than is typical,” the report read.

Politicians are also relying more heavily on digital spending across platforms like Facebook, Google, Snapchat and X, expected to spend $1.6 billion in that category during the cycle, according to AdImpact.

Within the election categories, the Senate has seen a notable increase in projected political spend, expected to draw nearly $3.4 billion, with one of the most expensive races being Texas’ Senate primary, the report said. Republicans hold 53 U.S. Senate seats compared with Democrats’ 45. The Senate’s two independents caucus with Democrats.

Advertisement

In gubernatorial races, three of the four most expensive competitions on record are taking place in 2026 in California, New Jersey and Georgia, according to AdImpact.

Even down ballot spending is expected to reach record levels this year, surpassing the record set in 2022 of $3.2 billion.

The midterm election cycle’s most expensive period is yet to come, according to AdImpact. The highest spending is between August and November, accounting for between 58% and 67% of all political ad spending for the cycle, with October itself accounting for between 28% and 36% of spend as the country nears Election Day.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Larvotto set to acquire Hammer in $54m deal

Published

on

Larvotto set to acquire Hammer in $54m deal

Larvotto Resources boss Ron Heeks says the company’s proposed acquisition of West Perth-based junior Hammer Metals will provide plenty of upside.

Continue Reading

Business

Middle East Conflict to Push Global Growth to Lowest Rate Since COVID-19

Published

on

Steering Through 2026's Contrasting Fortunes

WASHINGTON, June 11, 2026—The conflict in the Middle East is expected to slow global growth to the lowest rate since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic amid higher energy prices, steeper inflation, and increased borrowing costs, according to the World Bank Group’s latest Global Economic Prospects report.

Summary

  • The Middle East conflict is projected to slow global economic growth to 2.5% in 2026, the lowest rate since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the World Bank Group’s latest Global Economic Prospects report. Disruptions to energy markets, rising inflation, and increased borrowing costs are the primary drivers.
  • Developing economies are expected to be hit hardest, with growth falling to a post-pandemic low of 3.6% in 2026. Gulf economies face near-zero growth, while rising debt levels and commodity price volatility continue to weaken fiscal positions across low-income countries. The World Bank Group has made up to $60 billion immediately available in response.

Global growth is forecast to slow to 2.5% in 2026, down from 2.9% in 2025. Forecasts for two-thirds of economies have been downgraded relative to January of this year. Global growth is expected to improve to 2.8% in 2027 but will remain 0.4 percentage point below the average during the 2010s. Weak growth in developing economies has stalled progress toward advanced-economy income levels. By 2028, developing economies other than China and India will have collectively experienced nearly a decade of no progress on narrowing their per capita income gap with advanced economies, the report finds. 

“Developing countries have faced a series of challenges over the last decade,” said Ajay Banga, President of the World Bank Group. “The impact differs by country, but the basic test is the same: protect people and preserve stability today, without giving up on growth and jobs tomorrow.

In response to the current shock, we are providing liquidity where it is needed now — and we are ready with additional financing, guarantees, and private-sector solutions if pressures deepen. Our job is to help countries steady the ship, keep reforms moving, and emerge stronger on the other side.” 

Ajay Banga, President of the World Bank Group

According to the report, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has severely disrupted energy markets, with Brent crude oil prices projected to average $94 a barrel in 2026, 36% above 2025 levels, assuming the worst disruptions abate in July. Fertilizer prices are forecast to increase significantly this year, with knock-on effects for food prices. Together, these pressures are pushing up global inflation, which is expected to rise to 4.0% this year, up substantially from 3.3% in 2025.  

Advertisement

Yet downside risks are significant. If energy supply disruptions prove more severe than currently assumed and are accompanied by substantial financial stress, global growth could fall to just 1.3% in 2026, and inflation would rise to 4.4%. 

This year, growth in developing economies is expected to drop to a post-pandemic low of 3.6%, down from 4.4% in 2025, before recovering to 4.2% in 2027. Economies in the Gulf that are directly affected by the conflict are expected to take the biggest hit as their growth tumbles from 3.9% in 2025 to close to zero in 2026. The report predicts growth will rebound in these economies—to about 5% in 2027–28—as trade recovers and spending on reconstruction begins.  

The World Bank Group is committed to supporting all developing countries as they confront crises. In response to the conflict in the Middle East, it is immediately making up to $50–60 billion available through existing instruments, including $25 billion of pre-arranged financing. This can support social safety nets for the most vulnerable people, boost fiscal capacity, and provide working capital and liquidity support for firms and farms. To date, over 30 countries are actively working with the World Bank Group to enhance readiness and enable a rapid response to the crisis under this response plan. If the conflict and its economic fallout persist, the World Bank Group can scale up its support to $80–100 billion over 15 months.  

South Asia is expected to see the strongest growth of any region in 2026, but even its growth will register a significant slowdown—from 7% in 2025 to 6.3% in 2026, the report finds. Sub-Saharan Africa’s growth is also slowing, with the biggest pressures coming through inflation, including high food prices due to the fertilizer supply shortages and price hikes. 

Advertisement

“The conflict has taken a toll on global activity, but every crisis also brings an opportunity,” said Ayhan Kose, the World Bank Group’s Deputy Chief Economist and Director of the Prospects Group.“This moment should be used to strengthen policy frameworks, invest in infrastructure, accelerate business-enabling reforms, and mobilize private capital to support job creation at scale.” 

The report’s special-focus chapters examine fiscal challenges in developing economies. About two-thirds of developing economies—and nearly 90% of low-income countries—are commodity exporters. Yet these economies tend to have weaker fiscal positions than other developing economies, as they face more volatile and less diversified revenues. Five years after a positive commodity price shock, much of the revenue windfall is spent, rather than saved to strengthen fiscal positions. To manage commodity price volatility, policy makers should rely on frameworks, such as well-designed fiscal rules and sovereign wealth funds with clear stabilization mandates, alongside improved domestic revenue mobilization and greater economic diversification. 

The other chapter explores how rising debt levels are making it harder for countries to respond to crises and invest in long-term development priorities—and driving up borrowing costs in the process. Since 2010, aggregate government debt in developing economies has climbed from under 40% of GDP to over 70%. The analysis finds that the more indebted a country already is, the more sharply its borrowing costs rise with additional debt. The effect is particularly acute in more vulnerable countries. For countries with elevated debt-to-GDP ratios, reducing debt levels can yield meaningful financial rewards: greater fiscal space to invest in infrastructure, health, and education, fueling economic growth and job creation.  

Regional Outlooks

East Asia and Pacific: Growth is projected to fall to 4.2% in 2026 before firming to 4.4% in 2027. 

Advertisement

Europe and Central Asia: Growth is forecast to slow to 2.1% in 2026 before edging up to 2.3% in 2027. 

Latin America and the Caribbean: Growth is expected to slow to 2.2% in 2026 before rising to 2.5% in 2027. 

Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan: Growth is forecast to drop to 1.6% in 2026 before recovering to 5.0% in 2027. 

South Asia: Growth is projected to fall to 6.3% in 2026 before rising to 6.9% in 2027. 

Advertisement

Sub-Saharan Africa: Growth is expected to edge down to 4.0% in 2026 and rise to 4.4% in 2027. 

The World Bank Group is one of the world’s largest sources of funding and knowledge for developing countries. For more than eight decades, the World Bank Group has combined financing and hands-on experience to create jobs and opportunities in developing countries. We work with public and private partners to build more resilient economies—and achieve our vision of a world free of poverty on a livable planet. Our Knowledge Bank replicates and scales proven solutions to tackle the world’s most pressing development challenges. 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

AT&T: Verizon's 27% Outperformance Sets Up A Solid Entry Point

Published

on

AT&T: Verizon's 27% Outperformance Sets Up A Solid Entry Point

AT&T: Verizon's 27% Outperformance Sets Up A Solid Entry Point

Continue Reading

Business

Opinion: It’s a jungle out there as car sales go ‘e’

Published

on

Opinion: It’s a jungle out there as car sales go ‘e’

OPINION: Disruption of the US car sales sector by an e-commerce interloper sends a warning to Australia.

Continue Reading

Business

SeaStock granted aquaculture licence

Published

on

SeaStock granted aquaculture licence

Fremantle-based SeaStock has been granted an aquaculture licence to establish WA’s first commercial scale, land-based seaweed production facility in Oakford.

Continue Reading

Business

Novo Nordisk stock rises after UK approves Wegovy pill

Published

on


Novo Nordisk stock rises after UK approves Wegovy pill

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025