Cloudflare outage breaks internet
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It's not just you. The world woke up to a very different Internet on Tuesday, Nov. 18, as numerous high-profile websites are down due to a Cloudflare outage. Amazon Web Services, X (formerly Twitter),
Starlink offers some big benefits over regular home internet, but what we really need are competitors in that space. Amazon wants to be one of those competitors with Project Kuiper, a satellite internet service that’s still in the works and could be operational by 2026.
The company has been quietly changing how it talks about who its internet customers will be before it announced a big name change last week.
Amazon has unveiled Amazon Leo, its new venture in the satellite broadband network market. The project has been under development for a long time, with the aim
Amazon rebrands its effort to expand global access to high-speed internet: Project Kuiper will now be known as Amazon Leo
This morning, an AWS outage took down a significant chunk of the Internet, including Roblox, Fortnite, Amazon, banks, and more.
October, Leo had just 150, though Amazon plans to expand this to over 3,000 in the future. The success of its New Glenn rocket will help tremendously.
Amazon has officially rebranded Project Kuniper as Amazon Leo, focusing on providing internet access in underserved regions through a constellation of 153 satellites in low Earth orbit. Headquartered in Redmond,
The renaming to Amazon Leo reflects a strategic shift from rural connectivity to broader commercial service, suggesting upcoming changes for how and where users access satellite broadband.
Cloudflare experienced a “spike in unusual traffic” shortly before errors broke out across many major websites it serves, the internet infrastructure company told Newsweek. Several major websites—including ChatGPT,