The internet service company Dyn, which routes and manages internet traffic, said that it had suffered a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on its domain name service shortly after 1100 GMT.
Service was initially restored within about two hours but close to three hours later the company said again said it was responding to an attack.
"Our engineers are continuing to work on mitigating this issue," the company said on its website close to 1700 GMT.
The website Gizmodo said it had received reports of difficulty at sites for media outlets including CNN, The Guardian, Wired, HBO and People as well as the money transfer service PayPal.
Dyn, which is headquartered in New Hampshire, said the attack went after its domain name service, causing interruptions and slowdowns.
Scott Hilton, executive vice president for products at Dyn, said in a statement today morning that a "global DDoS attack" had been launched on its Managed DNS infrastructure on the US east coast.
However later today the affected areas had spread to parts of the Midwest and California. Similar maps for Netflix and Twitter website specifically showed areas of outage in Europe.
The US Department of Homeland Security told AFP it was monitoring the situation.
"We're aware and are investigating all potential causes," said DHS spokeswoman Gillian Christensen.
Amazon Web Services, which hosts some of the most popular sites on the internet, including Netflix and the homestay network Airbnb, said on its website that it had resolved problems by 1310 GMT only to begin addressing similar problems three hours later in a different region.
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