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Cloudflare Blames Google Cloud For Mass Services Outages TechTricks365


“This is a Google Cloud outage,’ a Cloudflare spokesperson tells CRN.

Cloudflare blamed an outage at Google Cloud for a number of products and services by the content delivery network vendor going down Thursday.

Google Cloud also saw a wide variety of products and services go down, and users of popular third-party applications ranging from Spotify to Discord reported outages—although it wasn’t immediately clear if those outages were related to Google Cloud’s issues.

“This is a Google Cloud outage,” a Cloudflare spokesperson told CRN in a statement Thursday. “A limited number of services at Cloudflare use Google Cloud and were impacted. We expect them to come back shortly. The core Cloudflare services were not impacted.”

Cloudflare said on its status webpage at 20:57 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)—1:57 p.m. Pacific—that “all Cloudflare services have been restored and are now fully operational.” The company said it continues to “watch platform metrics to confirm sustained stability.”

[RELATED: SentinelOne: Console Access Restored After Global Platform Outage]

Cloudflare, Google Outages

In a statement to CRN, a Google Cloud spokesperson said that the company is “currently investigating a service disruption to some Google Cloud services” and referred to its public status dashboard for the latest updates.

In an update published to Cloudflare’s status page Thursday at 19:57 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)—12:57 p.m. Pacific—the San Francisco-based company blamed “an outage of a 3rd party service that is a key dependency” for its “critical Workers KV service.”

“As a result, certain Cloudflare products that rely on KV service to store and disseminate information are unavailable,” according to the post. “Cloudflare engineers are working to restore services immediately. We are aware of the deep impact this outage has caused and are working with all hands on deck to restore all services as quickly as possible.”

Google Cloud updated its status page at 2 p.m. Pacific to say that it has “implemented mitigation for the issue in us-central1 and multi-region/us and we are seeing signs of recovery.” The us-central1 region includes Iowa.

“We have received confirmation from our internal monitoring and customers that the Google Cloud products are also seeing recovery in multiple regions and are also seeing signs of some recovery in us-central1 and mutli-region/us,” according to the vendor. We expect the recovery to complete in less than an hour. We will provide an update by Thursday, 2025-06-12 14:30 PDT with current details.”

Ookla’s online Downdetector tool showed that Google Cloud’s outage reports hit about 14,000 by 11:25 a.m. Pacific. The number fell to about 3,000 by 12:40 p.m.

Downdetector saw about 3,000 reported Cloudflare outages at around 11:41 a.m. Pacific. The number fell to about 1,000 reports an hour later.

Google Cloud rival Amazon Web Services also saw a spike in outage reports on Downdetector, reaching about 6,000 reports by 11:55 a.m. However, AWS’ status page did not show any issues. The number fell to about 2,000 reports by 12:40 p.m.

And fellow cloud giant Microsoft Azure logged about 1,000 outage reports on Downdetector as of 11:49 a.m., but its status page also showed no issues. The number fell to 251 reports by 12:49 p.m. Pacific.

Cloudflare posted to its system status website at 19:12 p.m. UTC—12:12 p.m. Pacific—that services were starting to recover.

Cloudflare’s first post about investigating an issue published at 18:19 p.m. UTC—11:19 a.m. Pacific. The issue was “causing Access authentication to fail” and affecting “Cloudflare Zero Trust WARP connectivity.”

Cloudflare services impacted since then include Access, WARP, Realtime, Workers AI, Stream, parts of the Cloudflare dashboard and AutoRAG, according to the vendor.

Google Cloud first posted about its own troubles at 11:46 p.m. Pacific. Google products impacted by the incident include Vertex AI, Google Cloud SQL, Google BigQuery, Google Cloud Console, Google Cloud DNS, Google Identity and Access Management and Google Cloud Storage, according to the vendor’s status page.

“Multiple GCP products are experiencing varying levels of service impacts,” Google Cloud said in its initial post. “We apologize to all who are affected by the disruption.”

An update about 10 minutes later added that multiple Google Cloud Platform products saw “varying level of service impacts with API requests.” At 12:09 p.m., Google reported that “our engineers are continuing to mitigate the issue and we have confirmation that the issue is recovered in some locations.”

It was not clear if third-party apps and services seeing outage report spikes Thursday were related to Google Cloud and Cloudflare’s issues. But among the products seeing wide outages Thursday according to Downdetector reports were (all times Pacific):

  • Spotify, reaching about 46,000 outage reports at 12:02 p.m.
  • Discord, reaching about 11,000 outage reports at 11:32 a.m.
  • Snapchat, reaching about 7,000 outage reports at 12:33 p.m.
  • Character AI, reaching about 4,000 outage reports at 11:19 a.m.
  • Vimeo, reaching about 2,000 outage reports at 11:51 a.m.


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