Cloudflare outage causes error messages across the internet
A key piece of the internet’s usually hidden infrastructure suffered a global outage on Tuesday, causing error messages to flash up across websites.Cloudflare, a US company whose services include defending millions of websites against malicious attacks, experienced an unidentified problem, which meant internet users could not access some of its customers’ websites.Some site owners could not access their performance dashboards. Sites including X and OpenAI suffered increased outages at the same time as Cloudflare’s problems, according to Downdetector.The outage is ongoing but as of 12.21pm GMT, the company said: “We are seeing services recover, but customers may continue to observe higher-than-normal error rates as we continue remediation efforts.”A further message said: “Update: we are continuing to investigate this issue.”A spokesperson for Cloudflare said: “We saw a spike in unusual traffic to one of Cloudflare’s services beginning at 11.20am. That caused some traffic passing through Cloudflare’s network to experience errors. While most traffic for most services continued to flow as normal, there were elevated errors across multiple Cloudflare services.“We do not yet know the cause of the spike in unusual traffic. We are all hands on deck to make sure all traffic is served without errors. After that, we will turn our attention to investigating the cause of the unusual spike in traffic.”Cloudflare’s engineers had been scheduled to carry out maintenance on Tuesday on datacentres in Tahiti, Los Angeles, Atlanta and Santiago in Chile, but it is not clear if their activities were related to the outage.As it tries to fix the problem it disabled an encryption service called Warp in London and said: “Users in London trying to access the internet via Warp will see a failure to connect.”Cloudflare was described as “the biggest company you’ve never heard of” by Prof Alan Woodward of the Surrey Centre for Cyber Security. The company says it provides services to “protect your websites, apps, APIs, and AI workloads while accelerating performance”.skip past newsletter promotionA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesPrivacy Notice: Newsletters may contain information about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. If you do not have an account, we will create a guest account for you on theguardian.com to send you this newsletter. You can complete full registration at any time. For more information about how we use your data see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.after newsletter promotionWoodward described it as a “gatekeeper” and said its roles included monitoring traffic to sites to defend them against distributed denial of service attacks when malicious actors try to overwhelm sites with requests. It also checks users are human.The problems at Cloudflare come less than a month after an outage of Amazon Web Services brought down thousands of sites.“We’re seeing how few of these companies there are in the infrastructure of the internet, so that when one of them fails it becomes really obvious quickly,” Woodward said.While the cause remains unclear, Woodward said it was unlikely to be a cyber-attack as a service so large was unlikely to have a single point of failure.
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