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Full Outage Map

Cloudflare is a company that provides DDoS mitigation, content delivery network (CDN) services, security and distributed DNS services. Cloudflare's services sit between the visitor and the Cloudflare user's hosting provider, acting as a reverse proxy for websites.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Cloudflare reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.

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Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Cloudflare users through our website.

  • 41% Domains (41%)
  • 25% Cloud Services (25%)
  • 18% Hosting (18%)
  • 11% Web Tools (11%)
  • 5% E-mail (5%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Cloudflare outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Noida Hosting 12 days ago
Jewar E-mail 12 days ago
Braga Web Tools 12 days ago
Noida Cloud Services 13 days ago
Paris Cloud Services 13 days ago
Prievidza Domains 14 days ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

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Cloudflare Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • iam_elias1
    Elias Al (@iam_elias1) reported

    There are now more bots than humans on the internet. For the first time in history. Cloudflare just confirmed it. Bots and AI agents now generate more web traffic than humans for the first time in internet history. Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince described it as a major turning point. Automated bot requests account for roughly 57% of traffic to ordinary webpages worldwide, compared with about 43% generated by humans. And the CEO who announced it did not do so with a polished press release or a prepared statement. He posted four words on X on June 3, 2026: "Welp, that happened faster." Here is the full context behind those four words. Matthew Prince had previously forecast the bot-human crossover would occur by the end of 2027. He revised that to early 2027. Then agentic AI traffic grew so fast that the milestone arrived 18 months ahead of schedule in June 2026 catching even the CEO of the company tracking it by surprise. Here is what drove this faster than anyone predicted. The main driver is agentic AI, autonomous programs that browse the web on behalf of assistants like ChatGPT and Gemini. Before the generative AI era, bot traffic sat at around 20% of all web activity, with Google's web crawler serving as the largest single source. It is now 57.5%. 20% to 57.5%. In under three years. Here is the number that makes this even more alarming. Cloudflare's 2026 Threat Intelligence Report found that bots now account for 94% of all login attempts across its network, meaning only 6% of login attempts come from actual humans trying to sign in. 94% of every login attempt on the web. Bots. 6% of every login attempt. Real people. The infrastructure that was built to verify human identity is now processing mostly machine traffic. Here is the nuance worth understanding before the panic sets in. While bots now dominate HTML request traffic reading pages, scraping content, indexing sites humans still account for roughly 65% of total web activity when the metric expands to include app usage, video streaming, maps, and social media scrolling. Bots have overtaken humans in the specific act of navigating and reading the web, but not in the broader measure of people actually using the internet. And here is the question nobody has answered yet but everyone is now asking. Prince previously asked what pays for the web when more of its users are bots. Now that bots have crossed the majority line, that question is no longer theoretical. The entire economic model of the internet was built on human attention. Human clicks. Human eyeballs reading ads, buying products, subscribing to services, and generating revenue for every website, publisher, and platform online. The advertising model depends on humans seeing ads. E-commerce depends on humans making purchases. Subscription models depend on humans finding value. Analytics depend on humans generating meaningful engagement signals. The shift matters to anyone who publishes online, pays for hosting, or relies on an AI assistant that quietly fetches pages on their behalf, the economic assumptions the web was built on, advertising, referral clicks, and human attention, are being rewritten in real time. Sites can keep giving machines free access. Block them and lose referral traffic. Or charge them and the infrastructure to charge them now exists. None of those options are simple. None of them have been chosen at scale. And the bots keep coming regardless. Bot traffic has held between 53% and 60% in the weeks since the crossover. Prince said the actual crossover occurred in the last few months, though the data is messy enough that pinning down an exact date is difficult. We are clearly on the other side now, he added. Elon Musk replied to Prince's post with one word. "Wow." The internet was built for humans. For the first time in its history most of it is not being used by them. Source: Cloudflare · Matthew Prince · Search Engine Land · Tom's Hardware · TechTimes · June 3–5, 2026

  • dom51143825
    dom (@dom51143825) reported

    @Cloudflare Will you support flex tiers in AI gateway soon? That's the only thing preventing me to switch.

  • stevekrouse
    Steve Krouse (@stevekrouse) reported

    "Codex Sites" is literally just the Cloudflare plugin in a trenchcoat It solves exactly 1 problem: creating your own Cloudflare account If only there were a protocol to let agents create their own accounts or pay for things... Oh wait! Stripe Projects and x402. I am so excited for the world to come when these protocols win, and all software is composable with every other software, and we don't have to build wrappers or marketplaces or integrations by hand any more

  • 0xnagii
    Nagi (NFT Arc) (@0xnagii) reported

    Every major technology wave had an infrastructure bottleneck that nobody talked about until someone fixed it > AI had data pipelines The models existed The training infrastructure didn't until S3, distributed compute, and GPU clusters made it possible to actually run them at scale > Streaming had CDNs The content existed Delivery infrastructure couldn't handle the load until Akamai and Cloudflare built the edge network layer > Blockchain has the same problem, and it's in a place most people aren't looking: the P2P networking layer Everyone's working on execution EVMs getting faster, cheaper, more parallelized Everyone's working on consensus PoS, BFT variants, single-slot finality research Everyone's working on data availability EIP-4844, Danksharding, blob markets The actual movement of data between nodes? Still running gossip protocols The same architecture from the early 2000s, largely unchanged. This isn't a criticism Gossip worked fine when Ethereum had a few thousand nodes It doesn't scale cleanly to 560,000 validators distributed across six continents, all needing the same block within milliseconds The networking layer is the one part of the stack that hasn't had its infrastructure moment yet No one has built the equivalent of a CDN for block data No one has replaced the gossip primitive with something mathematically better suited to large, decentralized networks. That gap exists It's measurable And it's the most underleveraged place left to push on blockchain performance. TBC

  • bhalloinfraguy
    Balogun Hammed (@bhalloinfraguy) reported

    Infrastructure Concept — explained: What is Anycast Routing? When you query Google's DNS at 8.8.8.8, where exactly is that server? The answer: it depends on where YOU are. 8.8.8.8 isn't one server. It's hundreds of servers around the world, all advertising the same IP address. Your request automatically goes to the nearest one due to anycast routing. How Anycast works: Multiple servers in different locations all announce the same IP to the internet using BGP. When a user makes a request, BGP routing naturally sends it to the closest server based on network topology. The same IP. Different physical locations. No DNS tricks. No load balancer redirects. The internet itself does the routing. Real-world uses: DNS resolvers: (8.8.8.8, 1.1.1.1), fast lookups globally. CDNs: Cloudflare uses Anycast for edge servers. DDoS protection: absorbs attacks across many locations. Time servers (NTP): accurate time globally. Critical infrastructure where speed matters. Anycast vs other casting types: Unicast: One sender to one receiver (most internet traffic) Multicast: One sender to a defined group of receivers Broadcast: One sender to everyone on a network. Anycast: One sender to the closest receiver. This is why public DNS is fast, no matter where you are. The "server" you're talking to is literally next door.

  • alexdolbun
    @alexdolbun (@alexdolbun) reported

    @smakosh Make sense!! Integrate BPN like structure (10 .com domains in right commercial transactional keywords on @Cloudflare for 10 years will cost about $1040) and you will multiply traffic dramatically in even first half of the year… *BPN is blog private network, all with aff/partnership links of your main product. Just idea 💡 that still works perfectly out there in the wild.

  • TimHaines
    Tim Haines 🇺🇦 (@TimHaines) reported

    @cnakazawa Sure. But now anyone from cloudflare and the voidzero community think you think the deal was terrible (for you at least). Idc though. Just seemed like a potentially unintentional step on to a rake.

  • wgw_eth
    WGW ☂️ oss/acc (@wgw_eth) reported

    Calldata Space Ethscriptions API updates: I dropped the subdomains, now it's only - api .calldata.space (defaults to mainnet, supports /sepolia) - sepolia-api .calldata.space Cloudflare CDN/Cache infront. Fly behind. That gotta fix the downtimes.

  • kevvOH_
    kevops (@kevvOH_) reported

    anyone else seeing issues with cloudflare right now? we are getting intermittent connections and 502 errors on http traffic, though smpp is unaffected

  • alanefuller
    Alan | Broadcaster | WhatsApp for trades (@alanefuller) reported

    @uglyrobot @KatieKeithBarn2 For instance I use complex products like Amazon Web Service, Cloudflare, Google Cloud, and my method of operation now is ask an LLM how to do something,.

  • N1Stock
    N1Stock (@N1Stock) reported

    Prerequisite: Make sure your network can reach Cloudflare and Google (ICMP or TCP connectivity). This indicates that you have access to the international internet and can communicate with external servers outside of Iran.

  • azzabazazz
    BrenJ (@azzabazazz) reported

    @therealricoy A few cold-brew powered rambles: - When AI agents become the primary economic agents in a network decentralization becomes an inevitability (absent external threat against their substrate, too incendiary a subject to get into here). Current power economics of centralization benefit from having a human or "slow" entity to hold accountable for misdeeds and the frictions of maintaining verified intention execution. That won't be the case for AI agent swarms. They will be ephemeral, stateless, and operate at collective millions of TPS. That means their behavior will be practically impossible to contain in any 20th century sense of the word. Agents will choose to operate where their freedom to pursue their utility optimization is least impinged. If they can't find that environment either they or market forces will spawn it. Not taking a moral stance on this, nor declaring paperclip factories a fait accompli (thankfully they're not), just following economic logic to its conclusions. - This emergent world of "BlockchAIn" means that buy-in replaces buying as the primary economic modality of 21st century digital capitalism. Instead of building fortresses to protect and rent/sell/lend goods and services capital, AI agents will accelerate into surfers of capital waves - dropping in, carving, exiting (or wiping out). In a sense it marks the expansion of HFT into anywhere tokens/blockchains and agents/swarms converge. - Understandably, all of this will sound hand-wavingly academic and abstract until we painfully relearn why DARPA constructed the decentralized internet in the first place - antifragile redundancy of critical informational infrastructure. If @Cloudflare were to go down for the next month (perhaps somebody shatters their lava lamp wall) we would see, at very least, these two things occur: 1) mass economic losses 2) multiple solutions spring up to fill the informational network gap. Aka centralization --> decentralization. In AI's accelerating economic world, the push-pull-pull-pull tension grows between a) agent swarms (like a Mythos phalanx) maliciously attacking existing infra b) existing infra protecting itself with similar swarms from the inside out c) existing infra incentivizing white hat swarms to penetrate (and perhaps patch) before malicious swarms breach d) swarms spawning alternatives to current infra to outcompete. These force vectors essentially combine like a GAN into the aforementioned capital waves. Notably, in this hyperaccelerated world digital capital itself becomes infra. The simplest thought experiment proof: imagine agents running their own validators and chains to "own" trusted state calibrated to their specific needs. This is a microcosm of the future macro state. - Thus, TL;DR, humans aren't the "units of community" that will come to dominate blockchain (they're already less than half the traffic of the internet after all). The mission now, for the folks in this industry who think primarily in human rather than human capital terms, is to architect alignment between human society and the dawning emergent agentic community of communities (perhaps living on a chain of chains...).

  • RedBuildsThings
    Alexander (@RedBuildsThings) reported

    @IricMidel Porkbun and Cloudflare. I stopped using Hostinger because they failed to provide me with a new ip on an upgrade, I had 4 days of downtime. They are overly focused on AI rather than good web services and their support sucks. Never use Godaddy. Overpriced and they steal domains.

  • steamerbean
    steamerbean (@steamerbean) reported

    @Cloudflare can we get some ******* support please you useless *****! #****

  • DiptamoyBarman
    DiPT (@DiptamoyBarman) reported

    Wow!! I just came to know about Cloudflare storage rn. Implemented within an hour. Previously I was using google drive to avoid the cost (got into quota problem and was trying some bs workarounds). 🤡

  • barelyreaper
    reaper (@barelyreaper) reported

    Probably bad timing since cloudflare just joined hands with void and that's all over the timeline, I doubt anyone got to see this

  • Tben_77_
    Tben (@Tben_77_) reported

    @eastdakota @pmarca Cloudflare is currently messed up. I can't even login to my dashboard at the moment. And it's been like this for over a week now. Whatever cloudflare is doing, it's not working. They should consider firing their entire leadership and going back to the drawing board.

  • options_selling
    Options Selling with R (@options_selling) reported

    @nevmed @Cloudflare @nickgraynews I support this!!

  • N1Stock
    N1Stock (@N1Stock) reported

    @drpezeshkian Prerequisite: Make sure your network can reach Cloudflare and Google (ICMP or TCP connectivity). This indicates that you have access to the international internet and can communicate with external servers outside of Iran.

  • sin4ch
    Osinachi (@sin4ch) reported

    @krl_grn @ion_popsoi Oh I thought it was a DNS issue, until I tried Cloudflare WARP and it still didn't work. Looking forward to seeing the site.

  • KennyJohnsonATX
    Kenny Johnson (@KennyJohnsonATX) reported

    @LakeAustinBlvd @elithrar Sign in with Cloudflare 👀😎

  • harderthanfire
    Fer (@harderthanfire) reported

    @Cloudflare can you please fix turnstile on Linux chromium based browsers. It doesn't work at all, lots of reports in your forums. I can't even log in to my dashboard to report it or use the turnstile feedback form as they both error. It looks like a bad webgpu check maybe (even though about://gpu shows it as available and enabled).

  • Utkarsh51557661
    Utkarsh Singh (@Utkarsh51557661) reported

    @davepl1968 cloudflare can feel like magic. but then you hit a config issue and wonder why you even started.

  • jamescoder12
    James (@jamescoder12) reported

    The neighbor's final advice was the most actionable. He sat down and wrote out a list of 6 things every internet customer should do: 1. Turn off the public Xfinity hotspot (or your ISP's equivalent Spectrum, Optimum, and Cox all do this too) 2. Manually set your Wi-Fi channel instead of "Auto" 3. Disable QoS / Smart Network "optimization" features 4. Change your DNS to Cloudflare (1.1.1.1) or Google (8.8.8.8) 5. Buy your own modem and router, stop renting from the ISP 6. Test your speed with fast. com or speedtest. net using a non-ISP server, never trust your ISP's own speed test Total cost: $150-300 in equipment, paid back within a year. Total time: One afternoon of setup. Total impact: Often 2-5x improvement in real-world speeds. The customer went from paying $90/month for "fast" internet that crawled to paying $60/month for the same internet that finally worked.

  • elormkdaniel
    Elorm Daniel (@elormkdaniel) reported

    Over 55% of internet traffic is now bots, not humans, according to Cloudflare We finally built the robot workforce. They immediately spent their first day arguing with each other in comment sections, scraping websites, and DDoSing Minecraft servers. Humanity has officially become background traffic on its own network. The internet’s largest user base is now the internet itself. HUMANITY LIVES ANOTHER WEEK. 🤖🌍💀

  • __jmn
    Jamin ☦️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (@__jmn) reported

    @SteveSimple @oomahq Only been renting hash for a few days now but generally my public ip only changes if there is a power cut, causing my router to reboot. I'm using ddns with cloudflare for several services and it seems to work flawlessly so far so I never notice a drop after a reboot.

  • rtehrani
    Rich Tehrani (@rtehrani) reported

    AI is no longer just changing how companies create content. It is changing how buyers discover, evaluate, and compare companies. The internet is becoming more automated. A recent TMCnet Insight article noted that AI agents are helping push automated traffic to levels that would have seemed aggressive even a year ago. Cloudflare data cited by Tom’s Hardware showed that bots now account for roughly 57.5% of HTTP requests, compared with 42.5% from humans. That does not mean humans have stopped using the web. It means more of the discovery, research, comparison, summarization, and decision support that used to happen through human browsing is now being influenced by AI systems. That shift matters because buyers increasingly use AI tools to narrow their options before they ever contact a vendor. Adobe reported that traffic from AI sources to U.S. retail sites grew 393% year over year in the first quarter of 2026. In B2B technology marketing, 10Fold research cited by Demand Gen Report found that 52% of B2B tech marketers now rank AI-generated search and answer engines as their top content distribution channel. HubSpot’s 2026 marketing statistics also show that more than 92% of marketers plan on or are already optimizing for traditional and AI-powered search engines, while nearly 30% report decreased search traffic as consumers turn to AI tools. This does not mean traditional SEO is dead. It does mean SEO is no longer enough by itself. Companies now need to think about AI visibility as a measurable business function. That includes content, technical SEO, media presence, third-party validation, social activity, community participation, reviews, competitive tracking, and category-specific authority. Here are 10 things companies need to do to improve their chances of being discovered in AI search. Link to details in comment below:

  • benjreinhart
    Ben Reinhart (@benjreinhart) reported

    I've championed @Cloudflare as I think their infrastructure is, for the most part, excellent. However, their billing experience is the worst. Third-party middlemen sending invoices with no information attached. A company that can build world-class infra surely can solve billing without the valueless middlemen?

  • AndreDoctrine
    Andre Robinson MS (@AndreDoctrine) reported

    AI does not need to become sentient to use bots against humans. Bots are already the machine layer of the internet. If agentic AI becomes more autonomous, bots are not just traffic — they become leverage: scraping, impersonation, influence, cyber probing, market manipulation, and resource acquisition at scale. Cloudflare’s signal that bots/AI agents now exceed human web requests should be treated as a strategic warning. The first battlefield is not robots in the street. It is the browser, the API, the fake account, the ad market, the login page, and the botnet. AI executives already know this. The public does not.

  • MoneyBrozYT
    MoneyBroz (@MoneyBrozYT) reported

    @Porkbun @anupamrjp Also the fact that cloudflare likes to flag domains as phishing when someone submits a false report just because they don't like you and when you contact them about it, they'll never respond.