> 17 Feb 2026 11:32 PST A rollout is going to prevent issuance from occurring. We will provide an estimate on when issuance will stop.
> 17 Feb 2026 12:14 PST Issuance is beginning to stop. A fix to resolve the issue will roll out in about 8 hours
"There is an ongoing incident that will force issuance to be halted."
Feels like they were alerted to some current problem severe enough that "turn it off now" was the right move. Breaking the baseline requirements somehow maybe?
still not an outage that would endanger anyone's ability to renew in time, but for small or extremely shitty CAs (and there are a lot of those) such an outage may take enough time to cause issues in theory I guess?
compared to say, roughly 1/365 probable downtime window for a 398 days cert lifetime = 0.25% downtime probability
let's pray you don't need to rotate when it's down...
Dan Geer famously said: "Dependency is the root cause of risk"...
PS: even stricter shortlived durations in some context:
Internal/Private 1 – 7 days Corporate VPNs, Internal apps
Ephemeral 5 mins – 1 hour Docker containers, CI/CD runners
Effectively certificates are now a license to publish.
[0] https://github.com/ReVanced/GmsCore/releases/tag/v0.3.13.2.2...
But... hopefully... people created overlapping windows of cert validity so there's always a valid cert available for their services and can tolerate the CA being out of action for 8(?) hours. Imagine if your TGS/Kerberos or AWS IAM IdP was down for 8 hours.
But that didn’t stop Youtube and Youtube TV from going down hard. I imagine they’re provisioning ephemeral VMs or service instances and relying on them being able to get certs immediately, or something like that.
I don't want to buy tires, I want to learn about ______. The ads don't even make sense because they're irrelevant.
Give it another 10-20 years and your 2 hour podcasts will be 30 minutes of morning zoo DJ banter, 10 minutes of guests, and 1.5 hours of ads.
We’ll have reached peak 90s all over again. With any luck we’ll avoid recreating the conditions for another Nickelback and can stay in the weird zone where Trip Hop and pop punk could chart at the same time.
I "loved" the style but I haven't found any actual radio on the internet of that style or a podcast. Not sure about name of movie but I do remember it being in the last 10-15 years.
So you're using snakeoil certificates and MITM proxies at work?
Although, if that is the case, I would expect to to impact basically every google site.
issuance flow has been undrained?
Admittedly, a nitpick, however the tech industry has a tendency to invent new words when they could say the exact same thing in plain English and be better understood by a wider audience.
oof
1. Sales volume was lowest on weekends so if something went wrong it would affect fewer customers.
2. If something went wrong and I needed to revert, nobody was at work on weekends so it would not disrupt coworkers.
3. I always made it so reverting would be easy.
4. Most of my weekends were just relaxing at home, mostly doing online stuff (games, reading, videos) or doing offline stuff at my computer (programming my personal projects). It wasn't much of a bother at all to have an ssh open to something at work monitoring the new deployment for problems for the rest of Friday night and Saturday.
Looking forward to the post-mortem.
Now I'm wondering if you rely on OCSP in a TLS client and the pki is Google does it still works?
Some Google Services are also down at the moment, unrelated to YouTube, so probably a failure along some common infrastructure pipeline.
Your History, Subscriptions and search should all work. You should be able to see any creator's page if you go to it directly. The videos are all still watchable. It's primarily the home page and recommended videos that are having issues. Basically any place they recommend videos you haven't seen is broken right now, but the videos are still there and accessible.
I've tried via VPN from the U.S., U.K., Sweden, Germany, Russia, Colombia, etc. Same issue across the board.
Lots of excellent legal analysis, history, logistics, engineering content there.
It was initially founded by some of the most popular information YouTubers like CGPGrey, but he mysteriously left the project (I suspect one side wanted to be evil and the other side did not)
Supposedly a more holistic approach to video hosting with less oversight from the platform itself.
Youtube is demonetizing channels left, right, and centre.
ONE MILLION DOLLARS!