In all three cases all they are doing is providing a platform. The issue with the size of the outages that we’ve seen should be placed on all of the companies that are opting to use them and only them without any regards to redundancy or design.
CloudFlare - There are other CDNs out there such as Akami and CloudFront
AWS - they have multiple regions, not just us-east-1. Also there is GCP and Azure, each with multiple regions
CrowdStrike - Okay there aren’t as many EDRs that do what they do, but it’s still the SPOF basket as the others
In every case I would argue it’s the inexperience, greed and path of least resistance to use these large companies and then blame the providers when something goes wrong, rather than the companies that have chosen to use these platforms. I understand that it’s easier to blame a single entity, but that shouldn’t absolve the companies that use them from being at fault.


1G, 100G, doesn’t much matter since you can’t exceed the speed of light. Cross country will always be 60-70ms.
I’m talking about capacity, not speed. The bonus is that they get back down to the 60ms response times they are looking for before they decided to go to the public internet that bounces them all over the country.