If you were having difficulty accessing your favourite website on Tuesday evening Australian time, you’re not alone. A jaw-dropping number of major websites around the globe suddenly became unavailable with no immediately obvious explanation — before reappearing an hour later.
It’s disconcerting when the sites we rely on suddenly become inaccessible, and even more so when it happens on such a vast scale. This outage saw seemingly unrelated sites go dark, including the BBC, Pinterest, the Financial Times, Reddit and even The Conversation.
List of websites affected here ????
— Sian Elvin (@SianElvin) June 8, 2021
Updating - and @MetroUK is not having issues https://t.co/K5T5SMrWoe
What happened and what’s a CDN?
While it’s too early to provide a comprehensive diagnosis of the incident, the internet (once it was accessible again) quickly pointed to the culprit: Fastly.
When we access a website, we might assume our browser goes off to the internet, talks to the remote site, and then presents the page on our screen. While this is in essence what happens, it masks a much more complicated process, which can include CDN services.
What is a CDN?
A CDN is a service that allows popular websites to keep copies of their pages closer to their customers.
For example, if we want to browse the BBC website, we could talk directly to a server in the United Kingdom. While the internet is perfectly capable of transferring the web page from the UK to Australia, there is an inevitable delay (perhaps a few hundred milliseconds). And nobody likes delays.
The experience for the user can be up to ten times quicker if a copy of the page (or elements of its content) can be held in Australia and delivered on demand.
Of course, accessing a version of the page held in Australia would work great if you’re in Australia but if you’re in, say, Los Angeles. So, to ensure fast content delivery for everyone around the world, CDNs usually work on a global scale.
A CDN service provider will typically operate data centres around the world, holding copies of popular content in major population centres to deliver content in each region.
However, modern websites often contain many elements, including images, videos and so on. When combined, the speed improvement through CDNs can be significant.
So, why did so many sites fail?
CDN services provide a valuable service to improve our web browsing experience — but at a cost.
When a major CDN provider such as Fastly experiences a failure, it doesn’t affect just one website; it’s likely to impact every website they support.
In Tuesday’s example, sites across the world suddenly went offline as requests for the CDN-hosted content were not serviced.
This incident demonstrates how reliant we are on technology — and on the specific implementations of technology in our modern lives.
If each website we visit hosted its own content exclusively, we would not be facing these issues. However, our web browsing experience would be much slower, reminiscent of the days of dial-up modems (well, perhaps not quite that bad).
Despite the global outage, it was resolved within about an hour. That would seem to indicate it’s unlikely to have been a security- or hacking-related issue.
Could it happen again?
Fastly is not the only CDN provider. Other high-profile services include Akamai and Cloudflare. Outages are not uncommon, but they are usually short-lived.
Readers can be assured (assuming you haven’t lost internet again) that service providers are closely watching this incident to ensure lessons are learned for next time.
Paul Haskell-Dowland does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.


Mega IPOs Like SpaceX and OpenAI Could Reshape S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 Portfolios in 2026
Marvell Stock Rises After Record Q1 FY2027 Earnings Fueled by AI Demand
SpaceX Delays Starship V3 Launch Ahead of Potential Record IPO
PDG Explores $1 Billion Sale of China Data Center Assets
Pentagon Expands AI Model Testing as It Seeks Alternatives to Anthropic’s Claude
Samsung Shares Surge After Strike Deal Eases Labor Tensions
SpaceX Starship V3 Test Flight Boosts IPO Momentum Ahead of Historic Market Debut
Synopsys Q2 FY2026 Earnings Beat Driven by AI and Semiconductor Demand
EU Antitrust Probe Could Lead to Massive Google Fine Under DMA Rules
Snowflake Stock Soars 30% After Q1 Earnings Beat and Major AWS AI Partnership
Intuit Raises Full-Year Forecast After Strong Q3 Earnings Despite Stock Drop
Samsung Workers Approve Wage Deal, Avoiding Major Strike and Boosting Chip Supply Confidence
HP Q2 2026 Earnings Beat Expectations Despite Memory Chip Pressure
X Corp Loses Legal Battle Over Australia Child Safety Fine
Macquarie Names Five Taiwan AI Stocks Set to Benefit From Data Center Growth in 2026
SpaceX IPO Hype Raises Questions as Many Major Stock Debuts Underperform Market
Morgan Stanley Names Top AI Security and Data Center Stocks for 2026 



