Global platforms briefly knocked offline
Cloudflare said Friday it had deployed a fix after a technical issue disrupted its dashboard and related applications, sending ripple effects across major websites worldwide. The incident pushed Cloudflare shares down as much as 4.5% in premarket trading before the company announced it had resolved the problem, narrowing losses to about 2%.
Websites including LinkedIn, Coinbase, and Substack were among the most visible services affected. Outage tracker Downdetector — which was briefly impacted itself — logged a sharp spike in user reports around 9:16 a.m. London time. Issues were also reported with Shopify, HSBC, and Deliveroo before activity stabilized following Cloudflare’s fix.
A swift response after a recent major outage
Cloudflare acknowledged the situation within minutes and updated customers that it had “implemented a fix” and was monitoring system performance. The rapid response drew attention because it came less than three weeks after a similar outage triggered widespread error messages across the internet. At the time, the company called that failure “unacceptable” given its central role in the global web ecosystem.
Friday’s disruption, while shorter, again highlighted the extent to which the modern internet depends on Cloudflare’s infrastructure. The company’s software and network services manage and secure traffic for roughly 20% of the web. Even a brief interruption can have outsized consequences across platforms that rely on Cloudflare for uptime and resilience.
Why Cloudflare outages matter
Cloudflare provides a wide range of services, including protection against distributed denial of service attacks, which are attempts to overwhelm websites with malicious traffic requests. Its tools also optimize performance, manage routing, and act as a critical buffer between platforms and cyber threats.
Because of this reach, disruptions in Cloudflare’s systems often manifest as global outages rather than isolated issues. Friday’s event followed that pattern: individual companies were not at fault, yet many of their customers experienced glitches simultaneously.
While the cause of the issue was not immediately disclosed, Cloudflare said it is continuing to monitor system stability. Businesses affected appeared to recover quickly once the fix was deployed.