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    Home»Technology»Cloudflare Outage Takes Major Parts of the Internet Offline: What Happened and Which Sites Were Hit
    Technology

    Cloudflare Outage Takes Major Parts of the Internet Offline: What Happened and Which Sites Were Hit

    Mohit MaheshwariBy Mohit MaheshwariNovember 18, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    A major Cloudflare outage on Tuesday disrupted large portions of the internet and left many popular platforms unreachable for several hours. The issue began in the afternoon and quickly expanded across regions as websites that rely on Cloudflare’s network started showing 500 errors, human verification failures and broken loading screens.

    Cloudflare later confirmed the problem on its status page and said the disruption was caused by an internal service failure. The company explained that a routine configuration change exposed a latent bug inside its bot mitigation system. This bug caused a core verification service to crash and then triggered a chain reaction across Cloudflare’s global network.

    A sudden wave of site failures

    The outage affected many high traffic platforms at the same time. Users reported problems on X, ChatGPT, Perplexity, Spotify, Canva, Discord, PayPal, Letterboxd, League of Legends, Genshin Impact and Honkai Star Rail. Several sites showed Cloudflare’s “internal server error” message, while others kept loading endlessly before timing out.

    Some users also received the confusing message “Please unblock challenges.cloudflare.com to proceed.” This normally appears when a browser blocks Cloudflare’s human verification script. During the outage, the script itself failed to load because Cloudflare’s servers were returning 500 errors. As a result, websites mistakenly assumed that users had blocked it, even when they had not changed any settings.

    Downdetector, the popular outage tracking site, also struggled to load since it depends heavily on Cloudflare’s network. When it briefly recovered, it showed sharp spikes in complaint reports across multiple services.

    What caused the global disruption

    Cloudflare’s Chief Technology Officer, Dane Knecht, clarified that the issue was not a cyber attack. He said a latent bug inside a bot protection service started crashing after a routine configuration update. This led to failures in related services and caused a broad degradation across Cloudflare’s infrastructure.

    Cloudflare powers content delivery, edge security and traffic management for a large portion of the modern web. Many platforms rely on its network for faster loading speeds and protection from traffic spikes. When something breaks inside Cloudflare’s core services, it affects websites that have no direct relationship with one another. This is why so many unrelated platforms went down at the same time.

    Not every major website was affected

    Although the outage felt widespread, several major services continued running normally. Sites that do not use Cloudflare or rely on their own independent infrastructure were mostly unaffected. These included YouTube, Netflix, Reddit, LinkedIn, GitHub, WhatsApp Web, Google Search and most news websites. Services built on internal delivery networks or different CDN providers handled the incident without visible disruption.

    This contrast made the outage more noticeable because users could open some parts of the internet while others failed instantly.

    Cloudflare says the issue is fixed

    By evening, Cloudflare confirmed that it had deployed a fix and that global services were recovering. Error rates gradually decreased as the company re-enabled affected systems across different regions. Cloudflare also said it is preparing a detailed breakdown of what went wrong and how it plans to prevent a repeat of the incident.

    Knecht issued a public apology, saying the company failed customers and caused real disruption to businesses and everyday users. He also said Cloudflare is taking steps to ensure that a single configuration change cannot trigger a cascading failure again.

    A reminder of the internet’s reliance on a few core providers

    This outage highlighted how much of the internet depends on a handful of infrastructure companies like Cloudflare, AWS and Fastly. A single bug in one network can temporarily take down social platforms, payment gateways, entertainment services and even outage tracking tools.

    For now, Cloudflare says all services are back to normal. The full incident report is expected soon.

    Cloudflare Cloudflare Outage internal server error
    Mohit Maheshwari
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