ADVERTISEMENT
The Moment Nigeria
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport
No Result
View All Result
The Moment Nigeria
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport

When Cloudflare stop: Why everything stops working when Cloudflare is down

by Honesty Victor
December 19, 2025
Reading Time: 4 mins read
When Cloudflare stop: Why everything stops working when Cloudflare is down
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsappShare on LinkedIn

 

Downdetector report on the largest global outages in 2025 ranks AWS, PlayStation, and Cloudflare among the top three largest service outages of the year, based on the number of reports. According to the data, Downdetector received 17 million AWS reports, 3.9 million PlayStation reports, and 3.3 million Cloudflare reports.

However, the scale of an outage is not only measured by report counts, but by how many services depend on a single provider to function.

RELATED STORIES

Top 10 African AI tech products that made wave in 2025

Top 10 African AI tech products that made wave in 2025

January 8, 2026
Mobile data usage rose from 518,000 terabytes to 1.23m in three years – NCC

Mobile data usage rose from 518,000 terabytes to 1.23m in three years – NCC

January 8, 2026

On November 18, 2025, and December 5, 2025, American company Cloudflare experienced downtime, which affected many of the Internet services millions of users worldwide rely on daily, including ChatGPT, Canva, Claude, and X (formerly Twitter). Interestingly, even Downdetector, the site many depend on to know which sites are down, was unavailable due to the Cloudflare issue.

Following the first downtime, Cloudflare revealed in a statement that the issue originated from an internal server error.

“The issue was not caused, directly or indirectly, by a cyber attack or malicious activity of any kind. Instead, it was triggered by a change to one of our database systems’ permissions, which caused the database to output multiple entries into a “feature file” used by our Bot Management system. That feature file, in turn, doubled in size. The larger-than-expected feature file was then propagated to all the machines that make up our network,” Mathew Prince, Cloudflare’s Co-founder & CEO, said in a statement.

While many people experienced the outages, few understand why tools from different companies and industries could all stop working at the same time. The answer lies in how much of the Internet depends on Cloudflare.

What is Cloudflare?

Cloudflare is an American company that offers a range of services for website speed and security, including Content Delivery Network (CDN) and other privacy features that protect sites from DDoS attacks and other malicious activities.

Think of Cloudflare as a middleman. Without the middleman, when a user sends a request to a website, the request goes directly to the website’s server and returns with content. If the website receives a massive amount of traffic, responses might be slow, or the site could crash.

As a middleman, Cloudflare routes every user’s request through its servers. Before it gets to the website’s server, it passes through one of Cloudflare’s data centres in 330 cities worldwide. With this expanse of data centers, when a user sends a request to a website like ChatGPT, it goes to Cloudflare’s servers, which deliver the content from the closest server to the user, making the site load faster.

Moreover, because of this process, websites can continue running despite heavy traffic.

Cloudflare’s position in the middle also blocks harmful traffic and malicious attacks before they reach the website.

These services are especially crucial to websites because they eliminate the need to install tools for speed and security individually and can plug into Cloudflare.

What Cloudflare does not do is host the data or applications for most websites. Companies like OpenAI, Meta, or X still run their own servers or rely on cloud providers such as Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, or Microsoft Azure.

Instead, Cloudflare operates as a layer in front of these services, handling traffic before it reaches the website itself.

What happens during a Cloudflare downtime?

In both incidents, the problem did not begin with ChatGPT, Canva, or X themselves. Their servers did not suddenly fail, nor were they under direct attack. Instead, the shared layer they rely on to deliver content to users temporarily broke down.

Because Cloudflare sits between users and many websites, its downtime meant that requests could not reach their final destination. To users, this appeared as a widespread failure across unrelated platforms.

Why does so much of the internet depend on Cloudflare?

Cloudflare was founded in 2009, and today, it handles Internet requests for millions of websites and claims to serve 81 million HTTP requests per second on average.

While Cloudflare seems to be the choice for almost every website on the Internet, it has a few competitors, such as Akamai and Amazon CloudFront.

Cloudflare’s appeal is mainly practical. Its services are relatively easy to set up, often requiring only a change in DNS settings. For many websites, Cloudflare offers immediate improvements in speed and security without the need to build complex infrastructure in-house.

Cost is another factor. Cloudflare offers free and low-cost plans that are attractive to startups, media organisations, and small businesses. Even large companies use Cloudflare to offload traffic and protect against attacks.

Over time, this convenience has made Cloudflare a default choice for millions of websites. But what this inevitably means is that if the company encounters a fault, as it recently did, almost everything is likely to shut down until Cloudflare comes back up.

What this means for the future of the Internet

When many websites depend on the same infrastructure layer, failures are amplified. A single outage does not affect just one company or service; it affects many at once.

Because Cloudflare handles traffic for a wide range of platforms, its downtime can create the impression that the Internet itself is broken.

Some organisations reduce risk by using multiple CDNs or building fallback systems. However, while this approach improves resilience, it requires more technical expertise and higher costs that smaller organisations and websites cannot afford.

Cloudflare outages are rare, but when they happen, they reveal how the Internet depends on a few major infrastructure providers.

While outages are unlikely to disappear, it is essential to consider how prepared the Internet is to absorb them without total disruptions.

Credit: https://techpoint.africa/insight

Next Post
Coursera to acquire Udemy in a $2.5B all-stock deal

Coursera to acquire Udemy in a $2.5B all-stock deal

More Articles...

EXCLUSIVE: WAEC validates Tunji-Ojo’s WASSCE certificate

EXCLUSIVE: WAEC validates Tunji-Ojo’s WASSCE certificate

January 8, 2026
BREAKING: Rivers Assembly begins Impeachment process against Fubara, deputy

BREAKING: Rivers Assembly begins Impeachment process against Fubara, deputy

January 8, 2026
FG revokes sale of FAAN staff quarters

FG revokes sale of FAAN staff quarters

January 8, 2026
Chimamanda Adichie lost one of her twin son after twenty-one months

Chimamanda Adichie lost one of her twin son after twenty-one months

January 8, 2026
Rivers Assembly rejects Fubara’s plan to submit 2026 Budget

Rivers Assembly rejects Fubara’s plan to submit 2026 Budget

January 8, 2026
UBA surpasses N500bn capital mark after N178bn rights raise

UBA surpasses N500bn capital mark after N178bn rights raise

January 8, 2026

STANBIC IBTC ADVERT

About Us

Themomentng.com is an online community of reporters and social advocates dedicated to bringing you features, news reports by Africans, but from a global perspective.

Contact Us

+447771081433
+2348051966180(WhatsApp/SMS Only)
Email: themomentng@gmail.com

Categories

  • Business
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Foreign
  • Health
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Metro
  • Motoring
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Society
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • Top Story

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Instagram

Copyright © Themomentng.com. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport