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The Day the Internet Stumbled: What Cloudflare’s Outage Teaches Us

Many major websites, including X and ChatGPT, stooped working on Tuesday after a major outage at Cloudflare. The issue began around 11.30 GMT, and thousands of users reported website failures on Downdetector. Popular apps and platforms like Zoom, Grindr, Canva, and even Downdetector itself experienced problems.

Cloudflare later confirmed that the outage was caused by a faulty configuration file that handles threat traffic. The file did not work as expected and caused a crash in the system that supports Cloudflare’s core services. The company released a statement saying, “We apologize to our customers and the Internet for today’s disruption”.

What Happened Inside Cloudflare

Cloudflare explained that the issue was not caused by a cyberattack. Instead, it was a technical failure within their own system. The problem has now been fixed, but some services may still show errors while systems fully recover.

Cloudflare also noted the importance of its role in the Internet ecosystem, saying that any outage on its end is “unacceptable”. The company’s stock price dropped by around 3% shortly after the incident became public.

Why So Many Websites Went Down

Cloudflare provides Internet security and traffic filtering to millions of websites worldwide. About 20% of all global websites use Cloudflare in some way. This means that when Cloudflare encounters a large system problem, many websites across the Internet are affected at the same time.

Platforms like X were showing Internal server errors linked to Cloudflare. ChatGPT shows messages requesting users to unblock Cloudflare challengers before continuing. Even Downdetector, the site used to report outages, faced issues.

Experts say this outage shows how dependent the modern Internet has become on a few major infrastructure providers. NetBlocks said the event revealed “a major disruption to Cloudflare’s infrastructure”. Security experts warn that providers like Cloudflare, Amazon Web Services, and Microsoft single points of failure for large parts of the Internet.

Growing Dependence on Tech Giants

This Cloudflare incident follows other major outages in recent months, including large disruptions at Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. Cybersecurity specialists say these repeated outages highlight how fragile global Internet services can be, especially when most companies rely on only a few providers for hosting and security.

As Internet services grow, companies are increasingly dependent on platforms like Cloudflare for protection against threats and high traffic loads. While these services offer convenience and strong security, they can also create massive problems when failures occur.




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