Security Operations
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Web Application Firewalls (WAF)
Outage Briefly Took Down Zoom, LinkedIn and Other Websites

Content delivery network giant Cloudflare is investigating a brief outage early Friday that took down multiple websites. The incident marks the second outage in the span of a month, although the company said the causes are unrelated.
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The incident affected social media platforms LinkedIn and X as well as Zoom and online design platform Canva. Multiple users took to X on Friday morning to report that they were prompted with an internal server error when they visited these websites. Impacted services have since been restored.
A Cloudflare spokesperson said the issue was first detected at approximately 8:47 GMT and stemmed from how Cloudflare’s web application firewall parses requests, impacting network availability.
“This was not an attack; the change was deployed by our team to help mitigate the industrywide vulnerability disclosed this week in React Server Components,” the company spokesperson said. Cloudflare on Wednesday said it updated its web application firewall to screen out attempts to exploit React vulnerabilities (see: Chinese Nation-State Groups Tied to ‘React2Shell’ Targeting).
Online service tracker DownDetector, which was itself affected by the outage, received nearly 4,000 reports, mainly on server connection issues on Friday.
Friday’s incident highlights growing instances of outages tied to the complex integration of tech stacks within leading service providers. Because their market dominance cuts across multiple sectors and regions, a technical issue can result in global disruptions.
A Cloudflare outage in November affected wide swaths of the internet for hours. It blamed the mishap on an update to a database for blocking bot traffic that sent abnormally large files to servers in what amounted to an internal distributed denial of service attack (see: Breach Roundup: Cloudflare Outage Root Cause).
An October domain name system failure in Amazon Web Services’ DynamoDB disrupted operations at British banks Lloyds and Halifax, the Amazon.com storefront, as well as Disney+. Similarly, a botched software update in 2024 by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike forced offline 8.5 million Windows machines.
