Cloudflare Faces Backlash After Disruption to Key Services Like LinkedIn and Zoom
In a recent development that has sparked widespread concern, Cloudflare, the cloud services and cybersecurity firm, apologized for its latest outage, which took down popular platforms such as LinkedIn, Zoom, and Downdetector. The incident, which occurred on Friday morning, marked the company's second major outage in less than a month.
According to Cloudflare, the disruption was caused by an issue with its application programming interfaces (APIs) and was not a targeted attack. However, this explanation may do little to alleviate concerns among users and customers, who are already reeling from a series of high-profile outages in recent months.
The outage, which affected approximately 28% of Cloudflare's traffic, lasted for half an hour before being resolved shortly after 9am GMT. While the incident was deemed minor compared to its earlier outage in mid-November, it has still sparked heated debate among experts and users about the reliability and resilience of key internet services.
Critics argue that Cloudflare's centralized business model, which handles a significant portion of global web traffic, makes it vulnerable to widespread disruptions. "There's a huge amount of centralisation," says Steven Murdoch, a professor of computer science at University College London. "Cloudflare do have a good product, but it leads to vulnerabilities."
MichaΕ WoΕΊniak, a DNS and internet infrastructure expert, agrees that the outage highlights the fragility of the big tech internet ecosystem. "This again shows how brittle is the big tech internet," he says. "These companies have become too big to not fail, and because they handle so much traffic, when they do fail, this immediately becomes a massive problem."
While Cloudflare's recent outages may raise questions about its marketing claims of reliability and resilience, some experts believe that the company's high profile can actually be a positive in terms of brand awareness. "When AWS went down, their share price went up," says Murdoch. "In some ways [the outage] is great marketing, because you see how many people are using Cloudflare."
In a recent development that has sparked widespread concern, Cloudflare, the cloud services and cybersecurity firm, apologized for its latest outage, which took down popular platforms such as LinkedIn, Zoom, and Downdetector. The incident, which occurred on Friday morning, marked the company's second major outage in less than a month.
According to Cloudflare, the disruption was caused by an issue with its application programming interfaces (APIs) and was not a targeted attack. However, this explanation may do little to alleviate concerns among users and customers, who are already reeling from a series of high-profile outages in recent months.
The outage, which affected approximately 28% of Cloudflare's traffic, lasted for half an hour before being resolved shortly after 9am GMT. While the incident was deemed minor compared to its earlier outage in mid-November, it has still sparked heated debate among experts and users about the reliability and resilience of key internet services.
Critics argue that Cloudflare's centralized business model, which handles a significant portion of global web traffic, makes it vulnerable to widespread disruptions. "There's a huge amount of centralisation," says Steven Murdoch, a professor of computer science at University College London. "Cloudflare do have a good product, but it leads to vulnerabilities."
MichaΕ WoΕΊniak, a DNS and internet infrastructure expert, agrees that the outage highlights the fragility of the big tech internet ecosystem. "This again shows how brittle is the big tech internet," he says. "These companies have become too big to not fail, and because they handle so much traffic, when they do fail, this immediately becomes a massive problem."
While Cloudflare's recent outages may raise questions about its marketing claims of reliability and resilience, some experts believe that the company's high profile can actually be a positive in terms of brand awareness. "When AWS went down, their share price went up," says Murdoch. "In some ways [the outage] is great marketing, because you see how many people are using Cloudflare."