• @thesystemisdown
    link
    English
    1922 hours ago

    The outage occurred yesterday when an employee responded to an abuse report about a phishing URL in Cloudflare’s R2 platform. However, instead of blocking the specific endpoint, the employee mistakenly turned off the entire R2 Gateway service.

    Oopsies

    • Syl
      link
      fedilink
      English
      721 hours ago

      Why tf did this employee have the permissions to turn off the entire service? If their job is responding to abuse reports, they do not need that level of privilege.

      • Pika
        link
        fedilink
        English
        3
        edit-2
        19 hours ago

        It’s entirely possible the employee had more than one hat and was dabbling in customer service that day. it’s not unheard of in the IT field for the buckets to mix when demand states it. Being said the better question is how you could mistake a shutdown/deactivate button as an apply button

        apperently cloudflare thought the same as they removed the button from the panel the employee used lmao

        • edric
          link
          fedilink
          English
          115 hours ago

          And even then, there should be an approval workflow to at least have one more set of eyes review the change before it’s implemented.

      • Thassodar
        link
        fedilink
        English
        019 hours ago

        Possibly paid by an outside actor to cause a service disruption? Rival company, the government, etc.

        • @kn33
          link
          English
          218 hours ago

          First - Hanlon’s Razor

          Second - that doesn’t explain how they had the permission to do that single handedly