Microsoft confirmed that Azure blocked a denial-of-service attack that involved more than 500,000 IP addresses spread across multiple regions.
Cloudflare confirms its outage wasn’t a cyber attack but an internal configuration error that disrupted web traffic.
A trio of autumn outages in a four-week period highlights how configuration and metadata errors in the cloud are becoming ...
An event at Cloudflare that crippled large portions of the internet yesterday was not caused by a cyber attack or malicious ...
A technical glitch in Cloudflare’s Bot Management System caused a major outage, affecting sites like ChatGPT, X, Coinbase, and Spotify.
The timing and Cloudflare’s brief initial misdiagnosis caused widespread confusion, with many people incorrectly believing Cloudflare had been DDoSed. Some reports even mentioned that the Cloudflare ...
A simple database permission change triggered a global failure, highlighting how self-inflicted software errors now cause ...
Microsoft recently mitigated a record-breaking distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack aimed at its Azure cloud service.
Cloudflare says the event was the company's worse outage since 2019. Several mitigations are being put in place to prevent a repeat, including more global kill switches for features and eliminating ...
Cloudflare didn’t suffer a cyberattack, but the outage demonstrated how quickly unexpected service interruptions can impact ...
Microsoft's Azure cloud services recently prevented the largest-ever DDoS attack, originating from the Aisuru botnet, which exploited compromised IoT devices.