When big parts of the Internet go down — like they did during the recent AWS and Cloudflare outages — it feels like the whole digital world suddenly hits pause. ChatGPT stops loading. Dropbox stalls. Even League of Legends freezes.
It’s confusing, frustrating, and honestly… kind of weird. How can one company having a bad day break everything?
Think of the Internet like a giant city.
So when Cloudflare has an issue, a big part of the Internet loses its home (where the site lives), roads (how you reach it) and its security (the checks at the door). And suddenly, it’s not just one website down — it’s hundreds or thousands.
What happened this time
Today, November 18, 2025, Cloudflare experienced a major outage. The company said it was triggered by a “spike in unusual traffic” to one of its services, which caused parts of its software to crash.
Because Cloudflare’s systems sit between you and many websites and apps, when they hit trouble, other platforms go dark too.
Here are some specific things that were affected:
So yes — your favourite chat tool, your game, your shopping site might all be impacted by one underlying issue.
Most companies don’t run their own servers or build their own Internet infrastructure anymore. It’s expensive, complicated and honestly unnecessary when tools like Cloudflare already exist to handle it.
That means, your favorite food-delivery app, your kid’s school software, the site where you pay your bills, your smart home devices — they may all live in the same “office park” (i.e., rely on the same infrastructure) or travel through the same “roads” (internet paths).
So when one of the big infrastructure providers sneezes, everyone using their systems gets a cold.
A few truths:
At Ting, we love everything you can do online. But we also make sure that we’re fighting for an Open Internet – where independent apps and alternatives to everything have an equal playing field (or can get their own retail space outside of the office park) to help make the Internet something that everyone can participate in, and rely on.
Outages like this are a reminder of something simple: The Internet isn’t one thing. It’s a chain. And sometimes one link snaps.
Your home connection might be solid. Your modem might be fine. Your Wi-Fi might be cruising. But if the apps, platforms, or payment systems you’re trying to reach live on infrastructure that’s down, everything grinds to a halt.
It’s not you. It’s not your setup.
It’s the wider Internet having a moment.
Anything that’s truly critical, make sure you’re syncing to your local machine or have another kind of backup. (If you’ve got fiber Internet, syncs and backups should be easy.)
Not sure what’s going wrong? You can check sites like Reddit or tools like Ookla’s DownDetector to see if other people are having the same issues before you look to your setup or Internet just in case.
And, no matter how stressed you are, do your best to just breathe. After all, there’s at least one engineering team likely having a worse day than you.