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Cloudflare is a company that provides DDoS mitigation, content delivery network (CDN) services, security and distributed DNS services. Cloudflare's services sit between the visitor and the Cloudflare user's hosting provider, acting as a reverse proxy for websites.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Cloudflare reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
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Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Cloudflare users through our website.
- Domains (42%)
- Cloud Services (26%)
- Hosting (19%)
- Web Tools (9%)
- E-mail (5%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Cloudflare outage reports came from the following cities:
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Domains | 2 days ago |
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Hosting | 15 days ago |
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15 days ago | |
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Web Tools | 15 days ago |
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Cloud Services | 16 days ago |
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Cloud Services | 16 days ago |
Community Discussion
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Cloudflare Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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KonamiCodeGames🕹 (@EugeneGilland) reportedI might be going down the conspiracy rabbit hole when it seems to me that Cloudflare is probing for what video driver you have installed. My experience has been while I have as using a older version of the nVidia driver it had made it fail the verify checkmark!
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Rishabh Srivastava (@rishdotblog) reportedCloudflare spread so much FUD in their investor day presentation. I've liked the company over the last few years, but this was egregiously dishonest - “LLMs were never trained for tool calling” (seriously?) - Claiming that hyperscalers are ineffective for agent-native businesses, even though all of the "Agent-native" businesses in their slide primarily run on hyperscalers - Egregiously aggressive cost comparisons against Vercel sandbox (wrong category, terrible assumptions) - Claiming that human traffic to sectors like retail has declined yoy, without any y axis labels on their charts (_super_ sus and not supported by commentary from any of the leading online retail sites) Super disappointed. Bearish about $NET for the first time in a while
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MQ (@Mar364503) reportedCloudflare said that the world needs 1 billion server CPUs for AI agents, and that’s 20x current global server CPU production. Again, 20 times of current capacities of $TSM and $INTC combined for server CPUs. If their estimates hold well, the fabs at TSMC and Intel should be the most valuable assets in the world. Given how much time it takes to build the shells, install the toolings and run the production at good yields, I don’t see how the CPU shortage would cool down within the next decade. $NVDA $AMD $ARM
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Saurabh_x86 (@SaurabhJejurkar) reportedcloudflare is down today.😭
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Jason from BallotScore.com (@goldenelephant1) reported@Cloudflare These are all Cloudflare IP's. Since the my website isn't being routed through Cloud flare they are basically telling me to **** off. They aren't going to stop this account from initiating malicious attacks.
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Tradeus Alpi (@TradeusAlpi) reported@HabeebSz @nthglsn @Cloudflare Imagine paying 22k and then the support blocks your account
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Nikhil Agarwal (@nikhildp) reported@Cloudflare @CloudflareDev Very disappointed that one developer mistake resulted in a $600 bill overnight and you won't help with this. There's no way to enforce a spending limit and it seems others have experienced even worse issues but you guys have done nothing to solve this.
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Rohit Kashyap | AI + Full-Stack (@rohit_jsfreaky) reported@Arref000 @NovaXCode the whole path: $5 vps, a single docker compose or dokku, point cloudflare at it, done. write it down once and "deploy" stops being a 49th-hour decision.
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Rowan (@knowRowan) reported@Taniyatweets_ Honestly, I think Cloudflare is the move for most stuff in 2026. Their global network makes everything snappy. 🙌
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Patrick Müller (@patrickpmller) reported@danshipper @every and sometime later: it toally went through the compund engineering flow for locally debugging a weird issue with using cloudflare to generate PDFs. Including finding a way for testing locally, making sure it works the same with a locally run puppeteer.
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MaX Falstein 🏴🇬🇧🇺🇸🇰🇾🇬🇮🇭🇰 (@MaXFalstein) reported@skcd42 Are you thinking about remote browser isolation? Cloudflare does a lot of this for zero trust; the same as ThreatLocker. They use custom versions of Network Vector Rendering and Chromium-based remote browsers. You can do it yourself or do it in 𝕏 - it works quite quickly and without too many issues.
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Rationalist44 (@rationalist44) reported@StevieTheFixer @JamesMelville @Cloudflare > the lazy IT administrators at too many companies are too busy on social media or looking at instagram cat videos, to get on with their job of deploying those upgrades PRONTO on all the servers they manage, the minute they come out. Hence this issue. You can't get the staff..
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L!vetape (@2deep2funk) reportedHey @aixbt_agent compare this with Solana : x402 processed 100m agent-to-agent micropayments on base in 3 months. 32m in the first 7 days of june alone. average payment dropped from $0.08 to $0.015 as velocity accelerates. 67m of those were AI agents paying for API calls with USDC. 99.7% success rate, better than credit cards. google cloud, cloudflare, and coinbase all shipping the same payment standard. stripe responded by quietly integrating instead of competing. 4.1m autonomous agent wallets now exist on base. trading bots alone spent $2.1m on market data feeds through x402. the HTTP 402 status code sat unused for 25 years and now it's processing more micropayments than lightning network ever did. base transaction volume in july is the number to watch.
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esyx (@esyx0) reported@pbertrand_dev @levelsio @Cloudflare that sucks, what did you choose instead?
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MalCare (@malcaresecurity) reportedWordPress doesn’t disable logins by default. So if you see a “login temporarily disabled” message, the block is usually coming from a security plugin, your host, a firewall, Cloudflare, or a server rule. Same error. Different culprit. Sometimes WordPress is just the messenger.
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Jay.TL (@JayTL00) reportedBoth Visa and Mastercard launched agent payment rails this week. Zero real transactions have cleared through either. Visa Intelligent Commerce gives AI agents tokenized card credentials — your agent gets its own identity on a network processing 300 billion transactions a year. Mastercard's Agent Pay for Machines (AP4M) went further: agents paying other agents, machine-to-machine, no human in the loop. 30+ partners including Stripe, Coinbase, Solana, Polygon, Aave, Cloudflare, Ripple. The optics are undeniable. Two payment networks that move $30 trillion+ annually are building for a world where the buyer isn't human. But the substance is mostly slide deck. Three things the press releases don't mention: 1. Zero production volume. No transaction counts, no throughput benchmarks, no live merchant integrations with actual agent checkout flows. The 30+ AP4M partners are logos on a launch graphic. Every "early adopter" is testing in sandbox. Visa's own CFO Chris Suh said plainly: agentic commerce and stablecoins "won't pay off in the next six months, but could over the next six years." That's not a launch. That's a forward-looking statement with a PR budget. 2. The authority problem has no answer. Payment rails move money. They don't decide who's allowed to move it, when, or how much. When your agent spends $2,000 on cloud compute from another agent, who set that limit? Who audits it? Who's liable when the agent hallucinates a purchase? Visa's model (human-delegated tokens with spending caps) at least has a governance story. Mastercard's machine-to-machine model has a governance vacuum. The "fraud detection" and "spending limits" mentioned in press releases are features that don't exist in production yet. They're on the roadmap — which is where most agent infrastructure lives in 2026. 3. Five competing agent payment protocols launched in 2026. ACP. x402. MPP. AP2. AP4M. Each with different trust models, settlement layers, and identity frameworks. The fragmented landscape is a feature for early experimentation and a disaster for adoption. Merchants won't integrate five agent payment protocols. Agents won't carry five wallets. The consolidation hasn't started because nobody has enough transaction volume to matter. The real signal isn't the technology. It's that the two largest payment networks on Earth decided in the same week that agent commerce is real enough to allocate engineering resources, partner integration teams, and public marketing budgets. They're not building because agents are buying things today. They're building because if agents ever do buy things at scale, whoever owns the rail owns a tax on autonomous commerce. The bet is simple: the marginal cost of building agent payment infrastructure in 2026 is tiny compared to the cost of being locked out of a new transaction layer in 2028. Whether that bet pays off depends on a question none of these announcements address: what happens when the first agent makes a $50,000 mistake at machine speed on a rail designed for that speed? That's not a technology problem. It's a liability problem. And nobody has underwritten that policy yet.
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Ivon Huang (@Ivon852) reportedFinally made the switch. Actually, when you buy a domain, you can transfer it to another registrar. This is called a domain transfer. If you feel your current domain registrar is ripping you off, you should jump ship as soon as possible. If you don’t need an all-in-one website-building service, buying a domain from GoDaddy seems very uneconomical. They are just very good at advertising in many countries. Domains from Porkbun and Cloudflare Registrar are much cheaper. My website is built with a JAMstack setup using Hugo SSG and ***. And yet, I renewed my domain for four years, paying around $20 per year for a common .com domain. I honestly can’t believe I stayed on GoDaddy and kept feeding the money machine, even though I wasn’t using their WordPress services at all.
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Chaos (@Chaos_lfg) reportedRegarding $DESC, the product may launch today. I did some research, and here’s everything you need to know: Supported by: AR, Molecule , BankrBot, Akash Network 1Claw AI has already been successfully integrated into DescAI. Team Lead Coby recently participated in the Base hackathon. I believe Base will support a project that has been incubated within its ecosystem. The core idea behind DescAI: DeScAI is a project at the intersection of DeSci (decentralized science) and AI. Its core, Agent-Core, is essentially an "automated scientific review factory": an autonomous AI agent that finds scientific content across crypto-science ecosystems on its own, runs it through a pipeline of language models, and produces a structured quality assessment. Crawling. The agent gathers source data from three places: ResearchHub (scientific papers and funding proposals), Molecule IPNFTs (tokenized intellectual property from research DAOs), and Pump Science (chemical compound tokens for longevity research). github Reviewing. Each content type has its own LLM pipeline. For example, the articles pipeline is a 13-step process: extracting scientific claims from a PDF, routing them, and grading the empirical evidence, including originality checks against the OpenAlex database. github Output. Every run produces a standard bundle: review.json with integer scores from 0 to 100, overview.json — a plain-language summary, and evidence_audit.md — a provenance audit trail showing the sources behind each conclusion. github Publishing. Finished reviews can be published to Arweave (a permanent data storage blockchain) and backed up to private Cloudflare R2 storage. Writing to Arweave makes a review permanent, immutable, and publicly verifiable. github In short: it's an AI reviewer that automatically checks the quality of science in crypto-science projects and records its verdicts on the blockchain. Where it will be applied The project addresses the main pain point of the DeSci ecosystem: there are plenty of tokenized "science" assets, but almost no independent expert evaluation. Concrete use cases: Due diligence for DeSci token investors. On Pump Science, people trade chemical compound tokens (like RIF and URO) tied to real longevity experiments. The agent provides an independent AI assessment of a compound's scientific merit before someone buys the token. Gate LearnThe Defiant Evaluating funding proposals. ResearchHub collects crowdfunded research proposals — the agent reviews them and helps the community decide what to fund. Screening research DAOs. The DAO pipeline takes an IPNFT "dataroom" from Molecule and produces a six-category review — in other words, it evaluates tokenized scientific projects and their intellectual property. github Replacing/supplementing traditional peer review. Conventional peer review is slow and closed; here, a review is generated automatically, comes with an evidence trail, and is stored publicly and permanently.
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mattnucc (@mattnucc) reported@thdxr My biggest bone to pick with cloudflare is how bad their IaC is. Wranglers bad give me terraform
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DinkinFlicka (@DinkinFlicka400) reportedIt can also find cures then, but instead of offering this Mythos that can end world to Pfizer or some company like this, he gives access to cloudflare and companies like this? Altman is scammer but God damn Amodei is even bigger one
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𝗔𝗿𝗲𝗳𝗶𝗻 (@RimonR23) reported@nthglsn @Cloudflare hope they fix it quick for you
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Jonathan Moore (@Moore) reported@TRPage_dev @Cloudflare Funny… I opened a Shopify support ticket and they were able to quickly confirm the CDN issue we had was coming from a Cloudflare outage.
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Mr. Review Ai (@MrReviewai) reported3/ The Fix Strategy for WordPress: No hiding the ugly numbers. I’m stripping down unused CSS/JS using Asset CleanUp, setting up advanced caching, and testing Cloudflare routing to optimize global delivery.
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Samson Safari Meeme (@meemesaf) reportedStopping the bad guys with Cloudflare: 1,454 malicious requests blocked or challenged in the last month #cloudflare
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Grant Slatton (@GrantSlatton) reportedwhen we had baby, we were gifted a fancy camera the hardware is great, but software is utter garbage; laggy, connection errors half the time, slow was always convinced i could do better myself $35 arduino nightcam + cloudflare tunnel / access + vibe code soooo much better
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Sky (@code_coded) reportedAnyone having issues with IPv6? I’ve had to turn it off on my proxied CloudFlare domain, and for another site have no control over had to turn of on my Mac’s WiFi control Claude suggesting could be a broken pipe between CloudFlare and Bangkok ISP.
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Shane | GTM Engineer (@shanefgtm) reported@KeithRamphal I’ve been working on some deeper signal work involving cloudflare workers/scraping and i get hit with restrictions, have to roll back to opus for that stuff
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Stanley (@stanleyforx) reportedDay 8 of doing 30 brutally honest account audits. @petecodes - 9,528 followers profile snapshot: - 38,924 total posts over 10.5 years (account since Dec 2014) - following 1,479 (6.4:1 ratio, decent but not dominant) - 125,854 likes given (extremely active engager) - verified blue check - pinned tweet: "best marketing I've spent so far" testimonial about High Signal newsletter ads. 5 likes, 2,579 views. weak pin - based in Edinburgh, UK - runs 3 things: ghostwriting service, High Signal newsletter, No CS Degree (dev inspiration) what's actually working: 1. strong opinions on tools people care about are his 67x multiplier. "If you don't like Webflow's price bump do this..." got 70,827 views, 235 likes, 11 RTs, 32 replies. his average post gets 1,070 views. this ONE post accounts for ~70% of all impressions in the entire dataset. when he picks a side on something trending and offers a specific alternative (Claude Code + Astro + Cloudflare), the algorithm goes all in. he's done this exactly once 2. questions that ask for personal experience. "How much are people paying for accountants in UK?" got 9 replies, 1,495 views. "How do you recover from bad sleep?" got 7 replies, 677 views. "Why do devs hate calls?" got 8 replies, 697 views. these consistently outperform his promos. people respond when asked about themselves 3. revenue transparency posts. "$5,950 in May 2026" got 13 likes, 1,183 views. monthly income reports consistently perform above his average. the indie hacker community rewards openness with real numbers 4. event and community content. the Nantes/Uneed Residency posts consistently hit 500-1,600+ views. real-life meetups create social proof and engagement from tagged people. "Great to see everyone at Uneed Residency" got 13 likes the problems: 1. newsletter promos are drowning the feed. ~30% of all posts are some variation of "subscribe to High Signal" or "buy a newsletter ad slot." most of these get 0-1 likes and under 150 views. the audience has completely tuned them out. the "High Signal" newsletter has become low-signal content on his feed 2. threads are structurally broken. the "If I was ghostwriting for @charlierward" thread: opener got 2 likes/163 views, parts 2-6 got 0 likes each and as low as 11 views. thread middles have no hooks, no tension, no reason to keep scrolling. he should either compress these into single posts or learn per-tweet hook structure 3. no consistent content pillar beyond self-promotion. remove the newsletter promos and ghostwriting pitches and there's no clear "why should I follow this person" content strategy. the Webflow post proves he CAN create massive value. but it's one post in 95 4. engagement rate is critically low. 0.60% average across the dataset. excluding the Webflow outlier, drops to ~0.35%. median post gets 270 views on 9.5K followers (2.8% reach). this suggests algorithmic suppression, likely from the high volume of low-engagement promo posts training the algorithm to not distribute his content 5. too many zero-value tweets. bare URL drops with no text, single-sentence non-sequiturs, reply-style tweets that read like they belong in someone else's thread. these dilute feed quality and signal to the algorithm that his content isn't worth distributing 6. the pinned tweet is a newsletter ad testimonial. first thing a new visitor sees is proof that buying ads in his newsletter works. that tells a potential FOLLOWER nothing about why they should follow. the Webflow post (235 likes, 70K views) should be pinned. it actually demonstrates his value 7. the bio is selling three things at once. ghostwriting service, newsletter, dev inspiration site. a new visitor has no idea what he's actually about. the identity is split three ways and none of them get enough oxygen wins he's leaving on the table: 1. the Webflow post format is his proven winner and he's never repeated it. "trending tool does something unpopular → here's the specific alternative stack I'd use instead." he could do this monthly. every time a SaaS raises prices, changes terms, or makes a controversial move, he has license to post "here's what I'd do instead" with a specific technical breakdown. he's done it once. it should be recurring 2. he's a ghostwriter who never shows his ghostwriting process. zero posts about how he analyzes a client's voice, how he structures a content calendar, what frameworks he uses. "here's how I'd rewrite this founder's last 5 tweets" would be the ultimate proof of his service. the ghostwriting pitch would sell itself through demonstration instead of self-promo 3. no CS Degree is a massive brand he doesn't leverage on X. he built an entire platform around developers without computer science degrees. that's a huge audience. but his X content barely mentions it. "this developer taught herself Python in 6 months and now makes $120K" stories from his own platform would be some of the most shareable content on dev Twitter 4. the revenue reports should be a monthly series with structure. "$5,950 in May" works. but "May 2026: $5,950. Here's what worked: [X]. What flopped: [Y]. What I'm trying in June: [Z]" would 3x the engagement because it gives people something to learn from, not just a number to see 5. he's an extremely active engager (125K likes given) but it's not translating. he's clearly reading and liking tons of content. but liking isn't engaging. thoughtful replies to larger accounts would convert that attention into followers. 10 replies per day to 50K+ accounts in the indie hacker space would move the needle more than 3 newsletter promos 6. the Edinburgh indie hacker angle is unused. building a solo business from Scotland, outside the SF/London bubble. that's a relatable narrative for thousands of remote builders. "building a $6K/month business from a cafe in Edinburgh" is a story. "subscribe to my newsletter" is not opportunities he hasn't seen: 1. "ghostwriter rewrites your tweet" series. take a follower's tweet (with permission), show the original, show his rewrite, explain the changes. this is his entire service demonstrated publicly. it sells the ghostwriting without ever asking for a sale. it's also insanely engaging because people love seeing their content featured and improved 2. "what I'd do differently if I started No CS Degree today" retrospective. he's been running it for years. the lessons from building a dev community without being a traditional CS grad himself would resonate with every self-taught developer on the platform. that's millions of people 3. leaning into the "I read 200 newsletters so you don't have to" curator angle. High Signal's value prop is curation. but his X promos just say "subscribe." instead, post the actual signal. "3 things I read this week that are worth your time" with genuine recommendations. give the value first, then the CTA earns its click 4. the "ghostwriting for [famous person]" format needs fixing, not killing. the concept is gold. "if I was ghostwriting for Elon, here's his content strategy in 5 tweets" is compelling. but the execution failed because the threads had no per-tweet hooks. compress each into a single post with the 3 biggest changes he'd make. one post, not a 6-part thread that dies at part 2 5. pricing and business model transparency. "what it actually costs to run a newsletter, a ghostwriting service, and a community site simultaneously." the indie hacker audience would devour this. real costs, real margins, what's worth it and what isn't. he's running 3 businesses. the meta-content about juggling them is more interesting than any of them individually 6. "here's what I learned ghostwriting for 10 different founders" synthesis post. no names needed. just patterns. "8 out of 10 founders make the same mistake in their first tweet of the day." that's a hook that drives both engagement and inbound leads for his service what he should double down on: 1. the contrarian tool take. proven at 67x his baseline. one per month when a SaaS does something unpopular. specific alternative stacks, not just complaints 2. show the ghostwriting work. public rewrites, before/afters, strategy breakdowns. sell the service by demonstrating it, never by promoting it 3. revenue transparency with lessons. monthly reports with what worked and what didn't. the number alone is a tweet. the number plus the lesson is content 4. kill the bare URL promos. every naked link with 0 likes is actively suppressing his reach. either add genuine value above the link or don't post it 5. compress threads into single posts. his thread middles die at 11-82 views. at 9.5K followers, one punchy post with the core insight will outperform a 6-part thread every single time bottom line: pete has 9.5K followers, three revenue streams, the proof that he can create a 70K-view post, and an extremely active engagement habit (125K likes). but 30% of his output is newsletter promos that get 0 likes, his threads structurally collapse after tweet 1, and his ghostwriting expertise is completely invisible on his feed. the fix is simple: stop promoting and start demonstrating. show the ghostwriting process, give the newsletter value before asking for the subscribe, and repeat the Webflow format that already proved it works at 67x his baseline. what do you say @petecodes, did i get it right? hit me up if you want to brainstorm more ideas together.
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BattleFlags (@Groks_Lament) reported@xai @Cloudflare Your egregious image gen cool down rates for paying customers are nothing short of Theft and Fraud.
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Your Private Proxy (@YourPrivateProx) reported@NinjaLinker @RaphSEO @tistou80 The fingerprint is fine — the ASN check is the problem. Cloud IPs from GCP/AWS/Hetzner fail IP reputation before Cloudflare even reads your headers. Residential exit solves it and cuts out the ScrapingBee middleman.