Key Takeaways
- Cloudflare and AWS experienced simultaneous outages affecting hundreds of users
- Steam, gaming platforms, and AI services also reported disruptions
- Cloudflare CTO attributed the issue to a latent bug triggered by routine updates
Major internet infrastructure providers Cloudflare and Amazon Web Services faced significant outages on Thursday, disrupting online services for hundreds of users across multiple regions. The simultaneous disruptions indicate broader instability in cloud and hosting ecosystems.
Cloudflare Outage Details
Downdetector recorded over 330 outage reports from US users for Cloudflare around 7:52 AM IST. Users experienced website loading failures and difficulties accessing platforms dependent on Cloudflare’s content delivery and security services.
The outage tracker revealed specific problem areas:
- Server connection issues: 56%
- Website problems: 31%
- Hosting disruptions: 12%
AWS Simultaneous Disruptions
Amazon Web Services reported more than 340 user issues in the United States during the same period. The outage tracking data showed regional impacts:
- us-east-1: 67% of reported problems
- us-east-2: 16%
- us-west-2: 16%
Gaming and Platform Impacts
Around 7:48 AM IST, over 450 users reported issues with Steam gaming platform. The distribution included:
- Server connection problems: 60%
- Website issues: 29%
- Login failures: 12%
This follows Tuesday’s widespread disruptions that affected major platforms including social network X, AI chatbot ChatGPT, League of Legends, and select Google and OpenAI services.
Cloudflare’s Response and Explanation
Cloudflare Chief Technology Officer Dane Knecht acknowledged the outage in a post on X, apologizing for letting down customers and the wider internet community. He confirmed services have been restored.
Knecht explained the outage originated from a latent bug in a system supporting Cloudflare’s bot mitigation tools. The flaw was activated by a routine configuration update, causing the service to crash. The company also noted an unusual traffic surge directed at one of its services earlier in the day.



