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ccakes | 2 months ago

> If an individual site took on the infra challenges themselves, would they achieve better? I don’t think so.

The point is that it doesn’t matter. A single site going down has a very small chance of impacting a large number of users. Cloudflare going down breaks an appreciable portion of the internet.

If Jim’s Big Blog only maintains 95% uptime, most people won’t care. If BofA were at 95%.. actually same. Most of the world aren’t BofA customers.

If Cloudflare is at 99.95% then the world suffers

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esrauch|2 months ago

I'm not sure I follow the argument. If literally every individual site had an uncorrelated 99% uptime, that's still less available than a centralized 99.9% uptime. The "entire Internet" is much less available in the former setup.

It's like saying that Chipotle having X% chance of tainted food is worse than local burrito places having 2*X% chance of tainted food. It's true in the lens that each individual event affects more people, but if you removed that Chipotle and replaced with all local, the total amount of illness is still strictly higher, it's just tons of small events that are harder to write news articles about.

psychoslave|2 months ago

No it's like saying if one single point of failure in a global food supply chain fails, nobody's going to eat today. And which is in contrast to if some supplier fails to provide a local food truck today their customers will have to go to the restaurant next door.

Akronymus|2 months ago

Also what about individual sites having 99% uptime while behind CF with an uncorrelated uptime of 99.9%?

Just because CF is up doesnt mean the site is

johncolanduoni|2 months ago

Look at it a user (or even operator) of one individual service that isn’t redundant or safety critical: if choice A has 1/2 the downtime of choice B, you can’t justify choosing choice B by virtue of choice A’s instability.

moqmar|2 months ago

That is exactly why you don't see Windows being used anymore in big corporations. /s

shermantanktop|2 months ago

Maybe worlds can just live without the internet for a few hours.

There are likely emergency services dependent on Cloudflare at this point, so I’m only semi serious.

p-e-w|2 months ago

The world dismantled landlines, phone booths, mail order catalogues, fax machines, tens of millions of storefronts, government offices, and entire industries in favor of the Internet.

So at this point no, the world can most definitely not “just live without the Internet”. And emergency services aren’t the only important thing that exists to the extent that anything else can just be handwaved away.

locknitpicker|2 months ago

> Maybe worlds can just live without the internet for a few hours.

The world can also live a few hours without sewers, water supply, food, cars, air travel, etc.

But "can" and "should" are different words.

raincole|2 months ago

> A single site going down has a very small chance of impacting a large number of users

How? If Github is down how many people are affected? Google?

> Jim’s Big Blog only maintains 95% uptime, most people won’t care

Yeah, and in the world with Cloudflare people don't care if Jim's Blog is down either. So Cloudflare doesn't make things worse.

dns_snek|2 months ago

Terrible examples, Github and Google aren't just websites that one would place behind Cloudflare to try to improve their uptime (by caching, reducing load on the origin server, shielding from ddos attacks). They're their own big tech companies running complex services at a scale comparable to Cloudflare.

chii|2 months ago

> If Cloudflare is at 99.95% then the world suffers

if the world suffers, those doing the "suffering" needs to push that complaint/cost back up the chain - to the website operator, which would push the complaint/cost up to cloudflare.

The fact that nobody did - or just verbally complained without action - is evidence that they didn't really suffer.

In the mean time, BofA saved cost in making their site 99.95% uptime themselves (presumably cloudflare does it cheaper than they could individually). So the entire system became more efficient as a result.

yfw|2 months ago

They didnt really suffer or they dont have choice?

locknitpicker|2 months ago

> The fact that nobody did - or just verbally complained without action - is evidence that they didn't really suffer.

What an utterly clueless claim. You're literally posting in a thread with nearly 500 posts of people complaining. Taking action takes time. A business just doesn't switch cloud providers overnight.

I can tell you in no uncertain terms that there are businesses impacted by Cloudflare's frequent outages that started work shedding their dependency on Cloudflare's services. And it's not just because of these outages.