What Is Cloudflare?
Cloudflare is a company that protects websites and makes them load faster.
It works like a security guard + speed booster for the internet.
When you visit a website that uses Cloudflare, your request goes through Cloudflare first.
Cloudflare checks if the traffic is safe and then delivers the website to you quickly from the nearest server.
One-Line Definition
Cloudflare = Website protection + Faster speed + Better reliability.
What happened
- Cloudflare reported “internal service degradation” beginning around 6:40 a.m. ET when its network started experiencing errors. Reuters+2Business Insider+2
- They attributed the issue to a “spike in unusual traffic” to one of their services which caused traffic passing through their network to experience errors. Business Insider+1
- The outage impacted many major platforms that rely on Cloudflare’s infrastructure or services — e.g., ChatGPT, X, Spotify, Canva, and many more. Reuters+2Financial Times+2
- Although Cloudflare deployed a fix and reported recovery for many services, elevated error rates and intermittent issues persisted for some time. The Guardian+1
Why it matters
- Cloudflare is a key piece of internet infrastructure — its services protect, accelerate, and route traffic for a large portion of the web (estimates suggest ~20 % of websites) — so when it falters, the impact is widespread. Reuters+1
- The incident illustrates how fragile and inter-connected the web has become — a single provider’s issue can ripple across dozens of platforms and services.
- For your website (and for your viewers), this serves as a reminder: even big systems can fail, so consider redundancy, monitoring, and plan for partial failures.