A SIGNIFICANT portion of the global internet experienced disruptions on Tuesday after US-based internet infrastructure giant Cloudflare reported a failure caused by what it described as a “latent bug” in one of its core systems. The outage temporarily knocked offline several major digital platforms, including X (formerly Twitter), popular AI service ChatGPT, online gaming networks, and some Google services.
News Point Nigeria reports that according to outage tracker Downdetector, thousands of users across multiple continents reported difficulties accessing sites such as X and the widely played game League of Legends, as well as select services provided by Google and OpenAI, the parent company of ChatGPT.
Cloudflare, a major player in online security and traffic management that handles about 20 percent of global internet traffic, acknowledged responsibility for the disruption. The company’s shares dipped by about 1.5 percent in early trading following news of the outage.
In a statement posted on X, Cloudflare’s Chief Technology Officer Dane Knecht said the company regretted the disruption and confirmed that engineers had worked swiftly to restore stability.
“Earlier today we failed our customers and the broader internet when a problem in Cloudflare network impacted large amounts of traffic that rely on us,” Knecht wrote. “In short, a latent bug in a service underpinning our bot mitigation capability started to crash after a routine configuration change we made.”
The company explained that the issue was triggered after it detected “a spike in unusual traffic” to one of its critical services, which eventually caused the internal system failure that rippled across the web.
Tuesday’s disruption drew comparisons to similar outages that recently affected major cloud service providers Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure, which also caused widespread downtime for gaming platforms, corporate systems, and transport-related services.
Cybersecurity expert Prof. Alan Woodward of the University of Surrey warned that such events highlight the vulnerability created by the internet’s increasing dependence on a handful of major infrastructure companies.
“This incident, as with the recent outage at AWS, shows how reliant some very important internet-based services are on a relatively few major players,” Woodward said. “It’s a double-edged sword as these service providers need to be large to provide the scale and global reach required by big brands. But when they fail the impact can be significant.”
While Cloudflare confirmed that the issue had been fully resolved, the incident has rekindled conversations about resilience and redundancy in global internet architecture.
An expert told News Point Nigeria that as more businesses, governments, and essential services migrate online, the stakes of such outages will continue to grow.
For now, affected services have resumed, and Cloudflare says it will conduct a detailed internal review to prevent similar disruptions in the future.

