I run a nonprofit and as soon as I got our new website up, a board member insisted the domain route through Cloudflare. I choose my battles with this guy, so I went ahead and did it. Thus, fixing a nonexistent problem means our website is now subject to Cloudflare downtime.
Comment on Cloudflare Global Network experiencing issues
Samsy@lemmy.ml 19 hours ago
Why the heck is everything stripped to them. I can’t believe the grandfather’s of the internet thought about a www which goes completely dark if some players like cloudflare, aws, azure etc went down. Put down these network oligarchs!
BanMe@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works 17 hours ago
Might be a good moment to ask the Board if they’d like to go another route
conorab@lemmy.conorab.com 9 hours ago
What about
2nd54th route?
some_kind_of_guy@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
Easier and cheaper to outsource your site’s security to someone else. God forbid you have to learn the cyber. Simple as.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 9 hours ago
Some things aren’t as easy to mitigate, like DDOS attacks. If that’s a legitimate concern, something like Cloudflare makes a ton of sense.
conorab@lemmy.conorab.com 9 hours ago
It surprises me that companies like Uber depend on them. You’d think that by the time you’re as big as Uber that you’d be able to just endure a DDoS but I guess the threat of multi-terabit DDoSs and the cost of the associated downtime would be enough to scare anybody smaller than AWS.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 7 hours ago
And why take the risk? Just pay Cloudflare to take care of it instead of getting all the expertise in house, surely that’s cheaper, no?
pressanykeynow@lemmy.world 4 hours ago
You need some CDN to hide your server IP from DDOS. Cloudflare is the only free one. AWS and Azure are the big ones with many additional services and seemed pretty reliable. So here’s 95% of the Internet probably.