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CLOUD FLARE OUTAGE STRIKES WORLDWIDE

Twalha Ratib November 18, 2025, 2:42 p.m. Sci-Tech
CLOUD FLARE OUTAGE STRIKES WORLDWIDE

A major Cloudflare outage has triggered a global internet disruption, knocking offline some of the world’s most heavily used websites.

The likes of X, ChatGPT, Canva and major online services have gone dark, in what has quickly become one of the largest internet failures of the year.

The issue began on Tuesday morning and escalated rapidly, with Cloudflare confirming a “global network problem” affecting vast parts of its infrastructure.

Users across the UK, US, Europe and Asia reported being unable to load timelines on X, run prompts in ChatGPT or access everyday tools like design platforms, betting sites and business services.

Downdetector recorded thousands of outage reports within minutes, with X peaking at nearly 10,000 alerts as users were repeatedly met with Cloudflare error pages instead of platforms loading normally.

Internet users began reporting problems loading X, previously known as Twitter, around midday on Tuesday. Users of other apps including artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT also reported problems.

The crash has been pinned on problems at Cloudflare, an internet infrastructure business that provides cyber security and networking services to dozens of major websites.

Shortly before midday, Cloudflare issued a status update admitting it was experiencing problems.

“Cloudflare is aware of, and investigating an issue which impacts multiple customers: Widespread 500 errors, Cloudflare Dashboard and API also failing.

The internet blackout comes just days after problems with Amazon’s internet infrastructure division, Amazon Web Services, knocked of the web offline in the largest crash in history.

As one of the world’s largest edge networks, Cloudflare handles traffic for millions of websites, keeping them fast, secure and shielded against attacks.

But today’s malfunction shows how deeply intertwined the modern internet has become.

The scale mirrors a previous Amazon Web Services (AWS) outage in October that brought down hundreds of platforms simultaneously, but today’s impact appears even broader.

Organisations have begun issuing internal advisories, warning staff of delays and degraded performance across digital systems until Cloudflare restores stability.

Some websites have begun to flicker back online, though users continue to report instability and slow recovery.

Cloudflare has not provided a timeline for a full fix, and the outage is still unfolding.

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