this post was submitted on 18 Nov 2025
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[–] VivianRixia@piefed.social 119 points 1 week ago (4 children)

It just means the internet is built on a very flimsy stack of technologies and any of them failing causes huge downstream issues. We saw that with AWS, and now with Cloudflare.

It's only concerning if there are no alternatives, but as it stands there are other companies that all of these websites could have done a failover to when both AWS or Cloudflare went down. But they decided that their websites having a single point of failure was worth the risk over paying for having a proper backup system ready to go.

[–] 667@lemmy.radio 82 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

Relevant XKCD, as always:

XKCD//2347

[–] ch00f@lemmy.world 51 points 1 week ago

(Joke stolen from another post that's since been deleted, so reproduced here.)

[–] Vanth@reddthat.com 6 points 1 week ago

I like to think there was a specific person in Nebraska the author had in mind. The University there had a tap into the ARPANET back in the day and always had interesting projects going in that one wouldn't typically expect in Nebraska.

[–] Tacoma@feddit.org 9 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I now imagine all the websites to fail over to the same backup services, effectively ddosing them and creating a chain reaction :D

[–] psycotica0@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 week ago

Yeah! We call those "Cascading Failures"

They're a nightmare! 😄

[–] pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)
[–] wolframhydroxide@sh.itjust.works 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

So many people seem to have just forgotten the crowd strike outage, which halted air traffic for a day and stopped a not-insignificant amount of public infrastructure

for a solid while i had forgotten cloudflare and crowdstrike were different entities, so i spent like 5 minutes scrolling through lemmy, incredibly confused

[–] Fmstrat@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

DNS doesn't fail over, unfortunately.