This seems like it's some 'muh free speech' post from this new account in response to Cloudflare removing KF's services...<p>The major thing to worry about with Cloudflare is what happens if it goes down, when, and how often. It doesn't go down often enough for me to worry about it, but also: 99.9% of people reading this probably use Cloudflare's free tier - as do I! If you want constant uptime, pay for it.<p>Also, probably best for discussion of CF vs KF to go in that thread.
Always wondered why the ISPs themselves don't compete. They're clearly well positioned. They have a lot of money. Are they that cheap and unable to get expertise to build out this infra?
I use Cloudflare on my sites, for both DNS and CDN.<p>The reason it's so popular isn't because of any conspiracy or vendor lock-in, but because it's a great product.<p>Back before I used them for DNS, any change I made to my records would literally take hours to propagate through the network and be reflected globally. Now, the updates are instant.<p>Their CDN product literally halved site load time back on my old shared host (less of an issue now I'm on DigitalOcean), while at the same time greatly increasing the number of concurrent users it can handle without generating spitting out Error 500 (internal server error).<p>If I need to disable their cache for whatever reason, it's as simple as logging on and ticking a single checkbox in my dashboard.<p>This is all for the free tier - God knows how amazing the paid product would be!
I find CloudFlare’s “verifying your browser” messages (in an infinite loop if you have the audacity to block cookies or use an ad blocker) much more infuriating than their rare outages.
Run your own DNS servers folks!!! Yes, your app servers won't really have much DDOS mitigation in-place but the chances of that happening to "you" specifically is about the same as your datacenter losing power.
Forgive my skepticism, but two strongly anti CF posts in 12 hours?<p>I have witnessed the mass conversion of normal people to extremism in the US in the last 10 years, and this is not it. If it is an attempt, it is too soon.
Maybe outsourcing one's security needs is "dumb" when it comes to something like the internet since "trust" is hard won and quite expensive.