Key Highlights
- Cloudflare outage left major crypto platforms offline, showing how reliant the internet is on a few critical infrastructure providers.
- Centralized exchanges and Solana protocols faced downtime, highlighting risks of single points of failure in online services.
- Cloudflare blocked over 400 billion AI bot requests, balancing web protection with control over content scraping and traffic.
Thousands of users worldwide were left locked out of major platforms, including Coinbase, Kraken, and leading decentralized finance (DeFi) apps, following a widespread internet disruption. The outage, linked to Cloudflare—a critical provider of internet infrastructure—temporarily disrupted traffic routing, security features, and website performance across multiple regions.
During the outage, users raced to X and reported error messages, pages failing to load, and login issues across multiple regions. Even outage-monitoring tools were unreachable, highlighting the scope of the disruption. Cloudflare confirmed that the problem stemmed from a Web Application Firewall change meant to mitigate a recently disclosed React Server Components vulnerability.
Cloudflare announced that a fix has been implemented and monitoring continues. In a statement on X, the company clarified: “A change made to how Cloudflare’s Web Application Firewall parses requests impacted the availability of Cloudflare’s network for several minutes today. This was not an attack; the change was deployed by our team to help mitigate the industry-wide vulnerability disclosed this week in React Server Components.”
The outage impacted major cryptocurrency applications and Solana-based protocols. SolanaFloor confirmed that platforms like JupiterExchange, Raydium, and MeteoraAG experienced user interface downtime. Centralized exchanges, including Coinbase and Kraken, also faced interruptions.
Impact on crypto and beyond
The latest disruption mirrors a previous outage on November 18, which also affected crypto platforms and social media giant X. During that event, users encountered widespread 500 errors, and Toncoin suffered a “major outage.” Platforms such as Arbiscan and DeFiLlama also reported intermittent issues.
A Cloudflare server update at 11:48 UTC confirmed the problem, noting that “Cloudflare Dashboard and API [were] also failing.” These 500 errors indicate internal server problems that prevent web pages from loading, emphasizing how dependent online services have become on Cloudflare.
Crypto exchanges and data platforms immediately felt the consequences. BitMEX stated it was investigating outages linked to Cloudflare. This follows a major AWS outage weeks earlier, which affected Coinbase, Robinhood, and the Base Layer-2 network. Recurring disruptions underline how vulnerable centralized crypto infrastructure remains to third-party failures.
As one X user remarked humorously, “It’s 1:10 AM…Half the internet is dark!…Now I’m going back to sleep. Why? Because for the first time in a while, our network is completely secure. If the customers can’t reach us, neither can the hackers.”
Broader context and AI traffic management
Cloudflare’s influence extends beyond outages. At WIRED’s Big Interview event, CEO Matthew Prince said the company has blocked over 400 billion AI bot requests since July 1. This move follows its Content Independence Day initiative, which prevents AI crawlers from scraping content without paying for access.
According to WIRED, the company reported that 416 billion AI bot requests were blocked since July 1, 2025. These steps illustrate Cloudflare’s dual role: both protecting infrastructure and regulating web data consumption.
Cloudflare outages show how easily big websites and services can break. Popular platforms, from crypto exchanges to everyday websites, can go offline if one key system fails. That’s why these companies need backup plans and multiple ways to keep their services running smoothly.
Also Read: Hackers Exploit USPD Stablecoin via Proxy Deployment Vulnerability
