X sufre caída global; miles de usuarios reportan fallas de acceso

Something went wrong. Try refreshing.
The error message users encountered repeatedly while X remained inaccessible across the globe.

En la mañana del jueves 14 de agosto, la plataforma X —antes conocida como Twitter— dejó de funcionar para millones de usuarios en todo el mundo, desde Perú hasta Estados Unidos, en un recordatorio silencioso de cuán frágiles son las infraestructuras digitales sobre las que hemos construido buena parte de nuestra vida pública y profesional. La interrupción, que comenzó cerca de las 9:40 a.m. hora peruana, duró varias horas antes de que el servicio se restableciera gradualmente, sin que la compañía de Elon Musk ofreciera explicación alguna sobre sus causas.

  • A las 9:40 a.m. hora peruana, miles de usuarios intentaron ingresar a X y encontraron solo un mensaje de error: 'Algo salió mal. Intenta recargar'.
  • La caída no distinguió dispositivos ni fronteras: computadoras, tabletas y celulares en Perú, Estados Unidos, Ecuador y decenas de países más quedaron bloqueados al mismo tiempo.
  • Periodistas, creadores de contenido y empresas que dependen de X para comunicarse con sus audiencias vieron interrumpido su trabajo sin aviso ni explicación oficial.
  • Los gráficos de Downdetector mostraron un pico sostenido durante horas, señal de que la plataforma no se recuperaría rápidamente.
  • Hacia la tarde, X restableció su funcionamiento normal, aunque algunos usuarios aún reportaban fallas residuales mientras los sistemas terminaban de estabilizarse.

El jueves 14 de agosto, X —la red social antes llamada Twitter y hoy propiedad de Elon Musk— sufrió una caída masiva que dejó sin servicio a millones de usuarios en múltiples continentes. Según el servicio de monitoreo Downdetector, los problemas comenzaron alrededor de las 9:40 a.m. hora peruana, cuando los reportes de fallas pasaron de ser esporádicos a convertirse en una avalancha. El mensaje que recibían quienes intentaban acceder era siempre el mismo: 'Algo salió mal. Intenta recargar'.

La interrupción fue total e indiscriminada. No importaba si se usaba un teléfono, una tableta o una computadora: la plataforma sencillamente no respondía. Para quienes usan X como herramienta de trabajo —periodistas, marcas, creadores— el apagón significó horas perdidas y visibilidad truncada. Para el resto, fue una incomodidad que recordó, una vez más, cuánto dependemos de estos servicios.

La empresa no ofreció ninguna explicación pública sobre el origen de la falla, dejando a los usuarios especulando frente a pantallas en blanco. Los datos de Downdetector mostraron que el pico de la caída se mantuvo durante buena parte de la mañana, sin señales de recuperación rápida. Recién entrada la tarde, el servicio comenzó a normalizarse, aunque de forma gradual: algunos usuarios siguieron experimentando problemas menores mientras los sistemas terminaban de estabilizarse.

It wasn't your wifi. On Thursday, August 14th, thousands of people trying to log into X—the platform formerly known as Twitter—found themselves locked out. The social network owned by Elon Musk went down hard, and for a stretch of the morning, the site was essentially unreachable across multiple continents.

The trouble started around 9:40 a.m. Peru time, according to monitoring service Downdetector, which tracks outages in real time by aggregating user reports. What began as scattered complaints quickly became a flood. Users in Peru, the United States, Ecuador, and dozens of other countries all reported the same problem: they couldn't access their accounts, couldn't see their feeds, couldn't post. When they tried to reload, they got a simple error message in Spanish: "Algo salió mal. Intenta recargar"—something went wrong, try refreshing.

The outage was indiscriminate in its reach. Whether you were trying to access X from a computer, a tablet, or a phone, the result was the same. The platform simply wasn't there. For people who rely on X for work—journalists, creators, businesses using it to communicate with audiences—the interruption meant lost time and lost visibility. For casual users, it was just an annoying reminder of how dependent we've become on these services.

Downdetector's graphs showed the disruption peaking in the hours after it began, with the spike holding steady as the morning wore on. That meant the problem wasn't resolving quickly. X's parent company offered no public explanation for what had caused the failure, leaving users to speculate and refresh their browsers in frustration.

By the time the afternoon rolled around, the platform had stabilized. Downdetector reported that X had returned to normal operation, and the service was functioning again. But the recovery wasn't instantaneous for everyone—some users continued to experience hiccups as the system fully came back online. It was the kind of outage that serves as a reminder of how fragile these digital spaces can be, and how quickly millions of people can find themselves suddenly disconnected from the networks they depend on.

A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

What actually happens when a platform this size goes down? Is it a single point of failure, or something more distributed?

Model

With something like X, it could be either. A database failure, a routing problem, a cascading error in their infrastructure—the company didn't say. But the fact that it hit everywhere at once, across continents, suggests something central broke.

Inventor

How long did it actually last?

Model

From around 9:40 in the morning until sometime in the afternoon. A few hours, maybe longer for some people. Long enough to be genuinely disruptive.

Inventor

Did X ever explain what happened?

Model

Not that anyone reported. They just let Downdetector tell the story. No statement, no apology, nothing public about the cause.

Inventor

What does that tell you?

Model

Either they didn't know yet, or they were still assessing the damage. Sometimes companies go quiet because they're still figuring out what went wrong themselves.

Inventor

For someone whose job depends on X, what does an outage like this actually cost?

Model

Hours of lost engagement, lost reach, lost income if you're a creator. And the uncertainty—you don't know if it's your account, your connection, or the whole system. That helplessness is part of the cost too.

Fale Conosco FAQ