Cloudflare Outage Causes Major Internet Disruption
On Tuesday morning, a significant portion of the internet experienced disruptions, affecting popular services like ChatGPT, Claude, Spotify, and more. The outage was attributed to a problem at Cloudflare, a key player in internet infrastructure.
According to Cloudflare’s status page, the company acknowledged the issues around 8 am ET and promptly began implementing a fix. Within two hours, Cloudflare announced that the problem had been resolved, stating that they were monitoring for any lingering errors to ensure all services were back to normal.
Cloudflare’s chief technology officer, Dane Knecht, later revealed that a latent bug in a service supporting their bot mitigation capability was the root cause of the disruption. In a public post, Knecht clarified that a routine configuration change triggered the bug, leading to widespread network degradation. He emphasized that this was not a deliberate attack but rather a technical glitch.
Knecht openly admitted that Cloudflare had failed its customers and the broader internet community with the outage. He reassured users that the company is taking steps to prevent such incidents from recurring and pledged to provide a detailed explanation of the incident shortly.
While most services were restored, some Cloudflare customers continued to experience difficulties accessing the dashboard. Cloudflare assured users that they were actively working on a solution for this issue and monitoring for any additional problems.
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The Cloudflare outage follows a similar incident at Amazon Web Services (AWS) less than a month ago, underscoring the internet’s reliance on a handful of major companies. When these giants experience disruptions, it has a ripple effect on the entire online ecosystem.

