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Cloudflare Outage Exposes Internet Fragility; European Startups Offer Solutions

November 19, 2025, 9:39 am
Amazon Web Services
Amazon Web Services
BusinessCloudDataDevelopmentInfrastructureInternetITPlatformServiceWeb
Location: United States, Washington, Seattle
Employees: 1-10
Founded date: 2006
Total raised: $8.31B
Twitter
Twitter
Location: United States, New York
Cloudflare
Cloudflare
AppFastHardwareInternetITOnlineSecuritySoftwareTechnologyWeb
Location: United States, California, San Francisco
Employees: 1001-5000
Founded date: 2009
Total raised: $4.63B
Cloudflare outage. Internet services disrupted. Single point of failure exposed. European startups emerge with solutions.
A major Cloudflare outage crippled internet services. Critical platforms like Spotify, X, and ChatGPT faced disruptions. The incident highlighted the internet's reliance on a few providers. European startups are developing solutions for more resilient infrastructure.

Cloudflare Down: A Digital Domino Effect


A Cloudflare outage brought parts of the internet to a standstill. The incident underscored the risk of centralizing critical infrastructure. The outage impacted numerous services globally. Websites and applications experienced slowdowns and inaccessibility. The disruption triggered widespread errors. Services from social media to e-commerce were affected.

The outage also highlighted the fragility of digital infrastructure. Dependence on a few major providers creates single points of failure. Businesses experienced payment outages and revenue losses.

European Startups Rise to the Challenge


European startups are building more resilient infrastructure. These companies offer alternatives to reduce reliance on global giants.

Several European companies are developing technologies that strengthen the overall digital ecosystem. These include:

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Cloudsmith:

Secures and manages the software supply chain. Helps diversify deployment footprints. Reduces dependency on single vendors. Received €21.9 million in funding.

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Exein:

Focuses on embedded cybersecurity for IoT. Protects critical infrastructure. Securing €70 million in funding.

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Nscale:

Deploys large-scale AI infrastructure across Europe. Building more distributed and resilient compute capacity.

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PEAK:AIO:

Provides high-performance storage for AI workloads. Supports reliability and speed. Receiving €5.7 million in funding.

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CBRX:

Automates cloud cybersecurity with AI. Adds protection and redundancy across the service chain. Receiving €540k in funding.

The Need for Digital Sovereignty


The Cloudflare outage highlights the need for digital sovereignty. European investment in infrastructure and cybersecurity is key. This reduces reliance on non-European giants. Building a more resilient and diversified internet architecture is important. Diversifying deployment footprints builds resilience.

Lessons Learned and Future Preparedness


Businesses must prepare for future disruptions. Resilience is no longer optional. Diversification is essential.

The outage served as a reminder of the internet's fragility. Even sophisticated networks can fail. This also exposed a growing global divide. Much of the world still relies on a small cluster of non-European giants. Their failures have worldwide consequences.

The question is how to prepare for the next disruption. Which partners and technologies will help withstand it?