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McLaren will make 'practical' call on team orders in Abu Dhabi, says boss Brown
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Norris completes Abu Dhabi practice 'double top' to boost title bid
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Chiba leads Liu at skating's Grand Prix Final
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Meta partners with news outlets to expand AI content
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Mainoo 'being ruined' at Man Utd: Scholes
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Guardiola says broadcasters owe him wine after nine-goal thriller
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Netflix to buy Warner Bros. Discovery in deal of the decade
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French stars Moefana and Atonio return for Champions Cup
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Penguins queue in Paris zoo for their bird flu jabs
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Netflix to buy Warner Bros. Discovery for nearly $83 billion
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Sri Lanka issues fresh landslide warnings as toll nears 500
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Root says England still 'well and truly' in second Ashes Test
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Chelsea's Maresca says rotation unavoidable
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Italian president urges Olympic truce at Milan-Cortina torch ceremony
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Norris edges Verstappen in opening practice for season-ending Abu Dhabi GP
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Australia race clear of England to seize control of second Ashes Test
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Trump strategy shifts from global role and vows 'resistance' in Europe
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Turkey orders arrest of 29 footballers in betting scandal
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EU hits X with 120-mn-euro fine, risking Trump ire
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Arsenal's Merino has earned striking role: Arteta
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Putin offers India 'uninterrupted' oil in summit talks with Modi
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New Trump strategy vows shift from global role to regional
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World Athletics ditches long jump take-off zone reform
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French town offers 1,000-euro birth bonuses to save local clinic
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After wins abroad, Syria leader must gain trust at home
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Slot spots 'positive' signs at struggling Liverpool
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Eyes of football world on 2026 World Cup draw with Trump centre stage
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South Africa rugby coach Erasmus extends contract until 2031
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Ex-Manchester Utd star Lingard announces South Korea exit
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Australia edge ominously within 106 runs of England in second Ashes Test
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McIlroy survives as Min Woo Lee surges into Australian Open hunt
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German factory orders rise more than expected
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Flooding kills two as Vietnam hit by dozens of landslides
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Italy to open Europe's first marine sanctuary for dolphins
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Hong Kong university suspends student union after calls for fire justice
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Asian markets rise ahead of US data, expected Fed rate cut
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Nigerian nightlife finds a new extravagance: cabaret
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Tanzania tourism suffers after election killings
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Yo-de-lay-UNESCO? Swiss hope for yodel heritage listing
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Weatherald fires up as Australia race to 130-1 in second Ashes Test
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Georgia's street dogs stir affection, fear, national debate
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Survivors pick up pieces in flood-hit Indonesia as more rain predicted
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Gibbs runs for three TDs as Lions down Cowboys to boost NFL playoff bid
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Pandas and ping-pong: Macron ending China visit on lighter note
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TikTok to comply with 'upsetting' Australian under-16 ban
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Hope's resistance keeps West Indies alive in New Zealand Test
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Pentagon endorses Australia submarine pact
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India rolls out red carpet for Russia's Putin
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Softbank's Son says super AI could make humans like fish, win Nobel Prize
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LeBron scoring streak ends as Hachimura, Reaves lift Lakers
Cloudflare bug takes chunk of web offline
Major websites including social network X and AI chatbot ChatGPT were disrupted on Tuesday after US online services provider Cloudflare said it had been affected by a "latent bug".
Web monitor Downdetector recorded disruptions for users of X, video game "League of Legends" and some services from Google and OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT.
Cloudflare, which specialises in online security and says it manages some 20 percent of global internet traffic, saw its share price slump 1.5 percent in early trading.
"Earlier today we failed our customers and the broader internet when a problem in Cloudflare network impacted large amounts of traffic that rely on us," chief technology officer Dane Knecht wrote on X, adding that the problem had since been resolved.
"In short, a latent bug in a service underpinning our bot mitigation capability started to crash after a routine configuration change we made."
The company said earlier there had been "a spike in unusual traffic" to one of its services.
The outage was reminiscent of hit Amazon (AWS) and Microsoft cloud services last month, disrupting some online services for video games, businesses and transport firms.
"This incident, as with the recent outage at AWS, shows how reliant some very important internet-based services are on a relatively few major players," said Alan Woodward, professor of cybersecurity at the University of Surrey in England.
"It's a double-edged sword as these service providers need to be large to provide the scale and global reach required by big brands. But when they fail the impact can be significant."
E.Raimundo--PC