Cloudflare, the company behind popular websites such as Spotify and OpenAI, experienced an outage that affected websites worldwide on Tuesday, Nov. 18. The company said in a statement to USA TODAY ...
A Cloudflare issue took many websites offline. Affected sites include X, ChatGPT, and more. The outages are eerily similar to ones earlier this year. It wasn't just you, another internet outage took ...
Most internet users hadn’t even heard of the company Cloudflare until Tuesday, November 18. While trying to load X.com (formerly Twitter), Canva.com and other online tools, they were met with a ...
If you tried logging onto X.com (previously known as Twitter) this morning, you were probably met with this message: “Please unblock challenges.cloudflare.com to proceed.” Up until now, most online ...
Update: Cloudflare has said that believe they have now fixed the cause of the incidents, and normal service should resume. A large number of apps and websites are currently taken entirely offline, or ...
Cloudflare experienced a "spike in unusual traffic” shortly before errors broke out across many major websites it serves, the internet infrastructure company told Newsweek. Read the full story here.
Update November 18, 10:30am Eastern: ChatGPT appears to be back online now as the outage appears to have been rectified. Original story follows. Happy Tuesday! At least it is, so long as you don't ...
Internet infrastructure provider Cloudflare says it has implemented a fix and believes it resolved the issue that caused global outages for ChatGPT, social media platform X, transit infrastructure and ...
Jake Peterson is Lifehacker’s Senior Technology Editor. He has a BFA in Film & TV from NYU, where he specialized in writing. Jake has been helping people with their technology professionally since ...
Attila covers software, apps and services, with a focus on virtual private networks. He's an advocate for digital privacy and has been quoted in online publications like Computer Weekly, The Guardian, ...