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In a message on its status page just before noon UTC, the company said that it “is experiencing an internal service degradation,” and investigating the issue.
Cloudflare’s servers act as “reverse proxy,” routing internet traffic through its network to protect against potential cyberthreats to its customers. It protects nearly a fifth of all sites around the world.
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Cloudflare has reported that it believes the problem has been fixed.
“A fix has been implemented, and we believe the incident is now resolved. We will continue to monitor for any errors to ensure all services are operating normally,” the company said on its status page.
Service to major websites such as X and Spotify appears to have returned.
Cloudflare has blamed the outage on a surge in “unusual traffic.”
“We saw a spike in unusual traffic to one of Cloudflare’s services beginning at 11:20 UTC. That caused some traffic passing through Cloudflare’s network to experience errors,” CBS news cited a company spokesperson as saying.
“We do not yet know the cause of the spike in unusual traffic.”
Cloudflare has not yet given an estimate as to how long a solution would take. While the company reported that it found and was implementing a fix at around 13:00 GMT, its latest statement more than an hour later said it was “continuing to work” on the issue.
The website belonging to Moody’s, one of the biggest financial ratings agencies, has similarly been affected.

Open AI's ChatGPT, the world's most popular chatbot website, and Downdetector, the go-to platform for checking website status information, have also been affected.


Cloudflare has reported that it has restored access to its secure internet traffic service for its London servers.
“We have made changes that have allowed Cloudflare Access and WARP to recover... We have re-enabled WARP access in London,” the company said on its status page.
REFERENCE FROM OLDER UPLOAD POST:

Coastal wolves like this one were recorded reeling in a crab trap and feasting on the herring and sea lion flesh meant as bait. /Kyle A. Artelle
"One damp spring evening last year, a wolf hauled a crab trap ashore off the central Pacific coast of British Columbia. The rangy animal made a delectable meal of the bait inside, and unknowingly launched a healthy debate about her feat.
To Kyle Artelle, an ecologist who coleads the HaĂÉ«zaqv Wolf and Biodiversity Project, the footage was “completely revelatory.”
“The amount of confidence she shows, and the efficiency of that behavior — it certainly suggests this is not her first rodeo,” says Artelle, of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse.
Video of a wolf hauling a crab trap out of the water and then raiding its bait has sparked a debate over whether this is the first evidence of tool use in wild canids, or just clever puzzle-solving.
Tool use, broadly defined as the deliberate manipulation of an object to achieve a goal, has been seen in domestic dogs, captive dingoes and many wild animals. Not so in free-living wolves, though they move mostly at twilight, making close observation rare.
HaĂÉ«zaqv Guardians had noticed many crab traps dragged onto the beach, their netting mangled and bait missing. The wardens initially thought marine mammals might be to blame. Or maybe bears. Remote cameras not only revealed the real culprit, but also later captured similar, less conclusive glimpses of the same behavior in additional wolves.
One of the truly underrated artists of the 1960's. Shirley Ellis defined hip with songs like her first hit "The Nitty Gritty...