
Starlink goes offline for the first time, Disrupting Satellite internet access worldwide
In a shocking turn of events, Starlink—SpaceX’s satellite internet service—went dark worldwide, marking its first major outage of 2025. The blackout caught users completely off-guard and quickly dominated headlines across the globe.
The disruption began around 3:15 PM ET, with users suddenly receiving vague error messages like *“no healthy upstream.” For many who rely on Starlink, especially in remote areas, the silence was deafening.
By 4:05 PM, Starlink finally broke its silence, posting on X (formerly Twitter):
“Starlink is currently in a network outage, and we are actively implementing a solution. We appreciate your patience.”
Roughly two and a half hours later, Starlink Engineering VP Michael Nicolls announced that the network had “mostly recovered.” The cause? A failure in critical internal software services—an explanation that raised more questions than it answered.
A Blackout with Global Impact:
From off-grid U.S. homes to entire international service regions, users were left disconnected. During the peak of the outage, global connectivity watchdog NetBlocks reported Starlink’s functionality had dropped to just 16% of normal. The radio silence from the company during the crucial first hour only deepened users’ frustration and concern.
Are Musk’s Tech Empires Cracking under Pressure?
This isn’t an isolated incident. Just days earlier, Grok—the AI chatbot integrated into X—began returning outdated or nonsensical responses. In June, X’s news feed glitched badly, flooding users’ timelines with recycled posts and error messages.
Meanwhile, Tesla’s mobile app briefly failed to unlock vehicles in certain regions last month. And over at Neuralink, the company’s health-related updates have been criticized as vague and incomplete.
While Elon Musk’s companies are known for innovation, they now appear increasingly vulnerable to backend failures, mysterious malfunctions, and widespread outages. The Starlink blackout may just be the most dramatic sign yet that these ambitious ventures need some serious reengineering.