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Tuesday, Nov 18, 2025

Major Internet Disruption as Cloudflare Outage Halts Services Worldwide

Major Internet Disruption as Cloudflare Outage Halts Services Worldwide

Widespread failures at web-infrastructure provider bring down major apps and sites; company attributes crash to internal configuration error, not attack. Security experts say the outage underscores a broader vulnerability in the internet’s architecture: the concentration of foundational infrastructure in the hands of a few companies.
A significant global internet disruption swept through many leading websites and applications today after Cloudflare, a key web-infrastructure provider, suffered a major service failure.

The outage left numerous platforms—including X (formerly Twitter), ChatGPT, Canva, and other high-profile services—unavailable or suffering elevated error rates for several hours.

Cloudflare confirmed the incident, reporting that a spike in unusual traffic to one of its services triggered errors across its network.

The company emphasised that this was not a malicious cyber-attack, but rather an internal configuration change or maintenance event that propagated system instability.

The root cause appears to have been a malfunction in Cloudflare's traffic-management subsystem following a routine change in the configuration file or automated process.

This malfunction caused widespread disruptions in the global edge network, affecting sites and apps that rely on Cloudflare’s routing, caching and security infrastructure.

Platforms directly impacted included X, ChatGPT, Canva, and Grindr, among others, with users reporting error messages that ranged from brief lag to minutes-long service outages.

Businesses and individuals across sectors described frustration at being unable to access tools used as part of everyday activity.

Following intensive remediation efforts, Cloudflare declared the incident resolved later in the day, though it cautioned that some users may experience residual effects or elevated error rates while monitoring continues.

Security experts say the outage underscores a broader vulnerability in the internet’s architecture: the concentration of foundational infrastructure in the hands of a few companies.

For organisations, the event has reinforced the need to consider vendor diversification and resilience strategies.

For everyday users, it serves as a reminder of how deeply integrated such infrastructure is into digital experience, even when operating quietly in the background.

Cloudflare has pledged a full post-mortem review, promising to enhance its configuration controls, strengthen safeguards, and rebuild customer trust.

Although no malicious activity has been identified, the incident raises important questions about dependency, oversight and redundancy within global web systems.

The internet may be back online, but the lessons about fragility remain.
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