by vlovich123 12 hours ago

That is also true at Cloudflare for what it’s worth. However, the company is so big that there’s so many different products all shipping at the same time it can be hard to correlate it to your release, especially since there’s a 5 min lag (if I recall correctly) in the monitoring dashboards to get all the telemetry from thousands of servers worldwide.

Comparing the difficulty of running the world’s internet traffic with hundreds of customer products with your fintech experience is like saying “I can lift 10 pounds. I don’t know why these guys are struggling to lift 500 pounds”.

autoexec 11 hours ago | [-12 more]

> However, the company is so big that there’s so many different products all shipping at the same time it can be hard to correlate it to your release

This kind of thing would be more understandable for a company without hundreds of billions of dollars, and for one that hasn't centralized so much of the internet. If a company has grown too large and complex to be well managed and effective and it's starting to look like a liability for large numbers of people there are obvious solutions for that.

evanelias 10 hours ago | [-6 more]

What "hundreds of billions of dollars"? Cloudflare's annual revenue is around $2 billion, and they are not yet profitable.

froober 7 hours ago | [-1 more]

Given how well-established cloudflare is, I would've figured they'd be profitable by now. That raises the question: why does so much of the web rely on a company which does not have the means to sustain itself?

bdangubic 7 hours ago | [-0 more]

given how much of the population relies on Uber for their transportation… ;)

autoexec 8 hours ago | [-3 more]

That was admittedly hyperbole, but since we're talking about a company with assets and revenue in the billions I'm not sure it matters. The fact remains that a lack of money/resources is not their problem.

evanelias 7 hours ago | [-2 more]

They don't have unlimited resources. They have ~5000 employees. That's not small but it's not huge either. For sake of comparison, Google hit that headcount level literally 20 years ago.

autoexec 7 hours ago | [-1 more]

They have enough money to buy anything they need. The CEO alone has billions. He could pay for as many employees as he wants out of his own pocket and not notice. In fact he's good at buying people, even senators.

evanelias 6 hours ago | [-0 more]

That doesn't make sense. It would be like saying Twitter, SpaceX, and Tesla all should be incapable of engineering mistakes because their owner is rich. The world doesn't work that way.

pulkitsh1234 11 hours ago | [-2 more]

Genuinely curious, how to actually implement detection systems for a large scale global infra which that works with < 1 minute SLO ? Given cost is no constraint.

autoexec 10 hours ago | [-1 more]

Right now I'd say maybe don't push changes to your entire global infra all at once and certainty not without testing your change first to make sure it doesn't break anything, but it's really not about a specific failure/fix as much as it is about a single company getting too big to do the job well or just plain doing more than it should in the first place.

Honestly we shouldn't have created a system where any single company's failure is able to impact such a huge percentage of the network. The internet was designed for resilience and we abandoned that ideal to put our trust in a single company that maybe isn't up for the job. Maybe no one company ever could do it well enough, but I suspect that no single company should carry that responsibility in the first place.

mewpmewp2 7 hours ago | [-0 more]

But then would a customer have to use 10 different vendors to get the same things that Cloudflare currently provides? E.g. protection against various threats online?

vlovich123 11 hours ago | [-1 more]

Can you name a major cloud provider that doesn’t have major outages?

If this were purely a money problem it would have been solved ages ago. It’s a difficult problem to solve. Also, they’re the youngest of the major cloud providers and have a fraction of the resources that Google, Amazon, and Microsoft have.

autoexec 11 hours ago | [-0 more]

> Can you name a major cloud provider that doesn’t have major outages?

That fact that no major cloud provider is actually good is not an argument that cloudflare isn't bad, or even that they couldn't/shouldn't do better than they are. They have fewer resources than Google or Microsoft but they're also in a unique position that makes us differently vulnerable when they fuck up. It's not all their fault, since it was a mistake to centralize the internet to the extent that we have in the first place, but now that they are responsible for so much they have to expect that people will be upset when they fail.

theplatman 8 hours ago | [-0 more]

With all due respect, engineers in finance can’t allow for outages like this because then you are losing massive amounts of money and potentially going out of business.