Yes. It's your ISP.
Happens to me occasionally; so I edit /etc/resolv.conf and put in one of the google DNS servers above my ISP's DNS server and it goes away.
It's most likely a DNS caching issue at your ISP.
Yes. It's your ISP.
Happens to me occasionally; so I edit /etc/resolv.conf and put in one of the google DNS servers above my ISP's DNS server and it goes away.
It's most likely a DNS caching issue at your ISP.