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Is Instagram Down Right Now? Users Report Posting Glitches as Meta Faces Fresh Complaints

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Instagram

Instagram appeared largely operational Saturday but users continued to voice frustration over intermittent posting and publishing issues, according to real-time tracking sites, even as no widespread global outage was confirmed by Meta Platforms Inc.

Instagram
Instagram

Downdetector, a popular service that aggregates user reports, showed elevated complaints centered on the “Posting / Publishing” category, accounting for about 73% of recent submissions in the United States. Smaller spikes appeared in the app itself and feed loading, though overall volume remained far below levels seen during major past disruptions.

Other monitoring tools, including DownForEveryoneOrJustMe, reported no broad detection of problems with Instagram as of early Saturday morning. The last significant detected outage occurred on March 20, 2026, lasting roughly 36 minutes. Scattered individual reports from April 17 mentioned error messages, but these did not indicate a coordinated service failure.

Meta, which owns Instagram along with Facebook, WhatsApp and Threads, had not issued an official statement on any current technical difficulties by mid-morning Eastern Time. The company’s business products status page showed no known issues for core Instagram services as recently as April 16.

The latest wave of user gripes arrives amid ongoing scrutiny of Meta’s platform stability and algorithm changes throughout 2026. Creators and everyday users alike have complained about fluctuating Reels performance, reduced reach and occasional random account restrictions, topics that frequently trend on Reddit and X.

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Instagram, with more than two billion monthly active users worldwide, has become a critical tool for social connection, influencer marketing, small business promotion and news consumption. Even minor glitches can disrupt millions, prompting swift backlash on rival platforms when the app falters.

Recent months have seen several notable Instagram hiccups. On April 8, Meta platforms experienced fluctuations lasting nearly 10 hours, affecting Reels posting and general stability, according to user posts and outage trackers. Earlier incidents in March included widespread DM failures that left thousands unable to send or receive messages, with reports peaking above 10,000 on Downdetector.

On March 11, users primarily in the United States reported trouble accessing the app, server connection errors and feed loading problems. Similar patterns emerged on March 27 and April 7, often involving login difficulties or frozen interfaces that resolved within hours.

These episodes highlight the growing complexity of Meta’s infrastructure as the company integrates artificial intelligence features, expands shopping tools and pushes short-form video to compete with TikTok. Engineers routinely roll out updates that occasionally introduce unintended side effects.

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When problems strike, users typically turn first to Downdetector or X to check if the issue is widespread. Hashtags such as #InstagramDown and #InstagramOutage quickly gain traction, often accompanied by memes and screenshots of error screens. Many express relief upon discovering they are not alone, while others vent about lost productivity or missed engagement opportunities.

For influencers and brands, downtime carries financial stakes. A halted posting schedule can mean lost sponsorship revenue or diminished audience interaction during peak hours. Small businesses reliant on Instagram Shops or direct messaging for customer service face particular headaches.

Meta has improved its transparency in recent years by acknowledging outages more quickly on its status channels or through official accounts. In past major blackouts, such as the December 2024 event that took down multiple Meta apps for hours, the company cited “technical issues” without providing deep technical details.

Experts attribute recurring glitches to several factors: massive scale requiring constant server synchronization, sophisticated content moderation systems that sometimes flag legitimate activity, and the relentless pace of feature rollouts. End-to-end encryption changes planned for direct messages after May 8, 2026, have also sparked separate debates about privacy and functionality.

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Despite occasional disruptions, Instagram’s core appeal remains strong. The platform continues to evolve with new AI-powered editing tools, enhanced Reels analytics and tighter integration with Meta’s broader ecosystem. Users in Seoul and other global hubs, where mobile-first usage dominates, often notice issues faster due to high traffic volumes.

Saturday’s reports appeared more localized or tied to specific features rather than a full platform collapse. Some users noted difficulty uploading Stories or Reels, while others experienced delays when trying to publish carousels or tagged posts. Refreshing the app or switching between Wi-Fi and mobile data frequently resolved the problems.

Analysts monitoring social media reliability suggest that partial outages affecting posting are becoming more common than complete blackouts. These “soft” failures frustrate users because the app still opens and scrolls, creating the impression that only their account or action is broken.

For those encountering issues, common troubleshooting steps include updating the Instagram app, clearing cache, restarting the device, or checking internet connectivity. Meta generally advises waiting a short period, as many glitches self-correct once backend systems stabilize.

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The broader context includes heightened regulatory attention on Meta. Lawmakers in multiple countries continue to examine platform stability, data practices and algorithmic impact on mental health, particularly among younger users who spend significant time on Instagram.

Parents and educators have expressed concern when outages coincide with school hours or family time, underscoring society’s growing dependence on these digital spaces. At the same time, the rapid spread of outage news demonstrates the platform’s cultural centrality.

As Saturday progressed, Downdetector graphs showed the spike in posting complaints beginning to level off, suggesting any localized problems were easing. No evidence pointed to a coordinated cyber incident or major hardware failure.

Instagram’s engineering teams work around the clock to maintain uptime, employing redundant data centers and sophisticated monitoring. Still, with billions of daily interactions involving photos, videos, messages and live streams, absolute perfection remains elusive.

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Users in different time zones often experience issues at varying intensities. Reports from the United States and Europe frequently dominate trackers during North American business hours, while Asian users may notice glitches during evening peak usage.

Looking ahead, Meta is expected to continue investing heavily in infrastructure to support emerging features such as longer-form content, advanced shopping experiences and deeper AI integration. Each new capability brings additional layers of complexity that must be stress-tested.

For now, most Instagram users can likely access their feeds, view Stories and scroll Reels without major interruption. Those still facing posting troubles are advised to try again later or use the web version as a temporary workaround.

The episode serves as another reminder of how quickly social media can shift from seamless utility to source of collective anxiety. In an always-on digital world, even brief service hiccups generate headlines and millions of concerned messages across the internet.

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Whether this latest round of complaints signals routine growing pains or hints at deeper scalability challenges, Meta will almost certainly monitor the situation closely. In the meantime, users worldwide continue refreshing their apps, hoping their next post goes through without a hitch.

Instagram’s resilience has improved over the years, but Saturday’s scattered reports illustrate that perfect reliability remains an ongoing pursuit for one of the world’s most-used social platforms.

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World Bank Highlights AI Boom as a Bright Spot Amid Slowing Growth in East Asia and the Pacific

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Asia Pacific Defies Global Slowdown in Sustainable Finance

Growth across East Asia and the Pacific is losing momentum this year, weighed down by an energy shock, rising trade barriers, and persistent domestic vulnerabilities, but a surge in artificial intelligence-related trade and investment is offering a rare point of optimism, according to the World Bank’s latest regional economic report.

Key takeaways

  • AI-related exports and investment surged across East Asia and the Pacific in 2025, with Malaysia, Thailand, and Viet Nam leading the way.
  • Regional growth is forecast to slow to 4.2% in 2026, pressured by the Middle East energy shock, trade barriers, and weak domestic demand.
  • Closing gaps in connectivity and skills is essential for the region to fully capture the productivity benefits of AI.

Regional growth is projected to slow to 4.2% in 2026, down from 5.0% in 2025, as the energy shock stemming from the Middle East conflict compounds the adverse impact of elevated trade barriers, global policy uncertainty, and domestic economic difficulties.

China, the region’s largest economy, is expected to decelerate from 5.0% growth in 2025 to 4.2% in 2026 and 4.3% in 2027, as weak domestic demand and property sector challenges persist and the global slowdown weighs on exports. The rest of the region is forecast to slow to 4.1% in 2026 before rebounding to 5.0% in 2027 as geopolitical tensions ease.

Against that difficult backdrop, the World Bank’s East Asia and Pacific Economic Update: Industrial Policy in the Digital Age identifies AI as a meaningful bright spot. The report highlights surging AI-related exports and investment in 2025, particularly in Malaysia, Thailand, and Viet Nam, as a notable positive development for the region.

Yet the Bank cautions that the full benefits of AI remain out of reach for much of the region. Adoption is constrained by gaps in connectivity and skills, with only 13 to 17% of multinational subsidiaries in China and Thailand currently using AI, roughly one third of the proportion seen in industrialised countries.

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The report also examines how rising energy costs could deepen hardship for ordinary households. A sustained 50% increase in fuel prices could result in a 3 to 4% loss in income for households across the region, with the poor and small and medium enterprises identified as the most vulnerable.

On a longer-term strategy, the update argues that industrial policy, if carefully designed, can help unlock productivity gains. Targeted support for specific industries in the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, and, more recently, Viet Nam proved effective in part because those countries had strengthened their economic foundations, including infrastructure, education, and regulatory institutions, and had liberalised trade and investment. The Bank warns that similar efforts elsewhere have delivered weaker results where those foundations remain fragile.

World Bank Vice President for East Asia and the Pacific Carlos Felipe Jaramillo noted that while the region continues to outperform much of the world, sustaining growth will require confronting structural challenges and seizing the opportunities of the digital age to increase productivity and create more jobs.

World Bank Group Director of Research Aaditya Mattoo cautioned that present difficulties could increase economic distress and inhibit productivity growth, adding that measured support for people and firms could preserve jobs today while reviving stalled structural reforms could unleash growth tomorrow.

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S&P Global Dividend 100 Index: Where High Yield Meets Quality

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Andrew McElroy is Chief Analyst at Matrixtrade, author of the ebook ‘Fractal Market Mastery’ and producer of the ‘Daily Edge.’ The ‘Daily Edge’ is emailed before each US session and outlines actionable ideas, directional bias, and important levels in the S&P500. It also looks at ‘What’s Hot,’ on any particular day, whether it is commodities, stocks, crypto, or forex. Andrew has developed a top-down proprietary system that starts with his weekend Seeking Alpha article focusing on the higher timeframes. Fractals, Elliott Wave, and Demark exhaustion signals are all incorporated, as are macro drivers and analysis of the market narrative. It is much more than just a few lines on a chart – it is a system developed over 15 years and proven to deliver a consistent edge. An independent trader since 2009, Andrew manages a family portfolio of stocks and ETFs with his wife and fellow Seeking Alpha contributor Macrogirl.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of VOO either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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ServiceNow Q1 Preview: Earnings Growth It Needs Is Too High To Justify A Buy (NYSE:NOW)

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I aim to provide alpha-generating investment ideas. I am an independent investor managing my family’s portfolio, primarily via a Self Managed Super Fund. My articles deliver 5-Minute Pitches focused on the core fundamental and technical drivers of the security.I have a generalist approach as I explore, analyze and invest in any sector so long there is perceived alpha potential vs the S&P500. The typical holding period ranges between a few months to multiple years.I am very much focused on adding value via alpha generation. I always start with a Performance Assessment section for each follow-up article. I publish unusually detailed analytics on my long-only, zero-leverage global equity portfolio performance on my Hunting Alphas website every month. At Hunting Alphas, you can also access the models to all the tickers I publish on.A bit about how I approach research and coverage of a stock:I build and maintain spreadsheets showing historical data on the financials, key metric disclosures, data on the guidance and surprise trends vs consensus estimates, time-series values of the valuations vs peers, data on key coincident or leading indicators of performance and other monitorables. In addition to the company’s filings, I also keep tabs on relevant industry news and reports plus other people’s coverage of the stock. In some cases, such as during times of a CEO change, I will do a deep dive on a key leader’s background and his/her past performance record.I very rarely build DCFs and project financials many years out into the future as I don’t think it adds much value. Instead, I find it more useful to assess how a company has delivered and the broad outlook on the 5 key drivers of a DCF valuation: revenues, costs and margins, cash flow conversion, capex and investments and the interest rates (which affect the discount rate/opportunity cost of capital). In some cases, especially for companies trading at very high multiples on a TTM or 1-yr fwd basis, I do a reverse DCF to make sense of the implied growth CAGR implications.Note: Hunting Alphas is related to VishValue Research on Seeking Alpha.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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