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Cloudflare, a global technology company specializing in internet security and performance optimization, has become a significant presence in San Francisco's tech ecosystem. Founded in 2009, the company has grown from a small startup to a major player in the digital infrastructure space, with its headquarters located in the city's South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood. As a leader in cloud-based services, Cloudflare has contributed to San Francisco's reputation as a hub for innovation and entrepreneurship. Its operations and community initiatives reflect the city's broader commitment to technological advancement and civic engagement. This article explores Cloudflare's history, its role in San Francisco's geography and culture, and its impact on the local economy and beyond.
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Cloudflare, Inc. is a global technology company specializing in internet security, performance, and reliability services. Founded in 2009 and headquartered in San Francisco's South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood, the company operates one of the world's largest distributed networks, spanning more than 330 cities across over 120 countries as of 2025.<ref>[https://www.cloudflare.com/network/ "Cloudflare Network Map"], ''Cloudflare'', 2025.</ref> The company went public on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol NET in September 2019 and reported annual revenue of approximately $1.625 billion for fiscal year 2023, growing to roughly $2.09 billion in fiscal year 2024.<ref>[https://www.cloudflare.com/press/press-releases/2026/cloudflare-announces-fourth-quarter-and-fiscal-year-2025-financial-results/ "Cloudflare Announces Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Results"], ''Cloudflare'', February 2026.</ref> As a provider of infrastructure that touches a substantial share of global web traffic, Cloudflare has become a notable presence in San Francisco's technology sector and in the broader conversation about internet governance, security, and access.


== History ==
== History ==
Cloudflare was founded in 2009 by Matthew Prince, Lee Holloway, and Michelle Zatlyn, who sought to address the growing challenges of internet security and performance for websites and applications. The company's initial focus was on developing a distributed network of servers to improve website speed and protect against cyber threats. By leveraging a global infrastructure, Cloudflare aimed to make the internet more reliable and accessible for users worldwide. The company's early years were marked by rapid growth, driven by the increasing demand for cloud-based solutions as businesses and individuals moved online. 


In the years following its founding, Cloudflare expanded its services to include features such as content delivery networks (CDNs), domain name system (DNS) management, and application programming interface (API) security. These innovations positioned Cloudflare as a key player in the cybersecurity and web performance industries. By 2015, the company had secured over 100,000 customers, a milestone that underscored its growing influence in the tech sector. Cloudflare's commitment to open-source software and its advocacy for internet freedom have further solidified its reputation as a company aligned with San Francisco's values of innovation and social responsibility. 
=== Founding and Early Years (2009–2013) ===


== Geography == 
Cloudflare was founded in 2009 by Matthew Prince, Lee Holloway, and Michelle Zatlyn. Prince and Holloway had previously worked together on Project Honey Pot, an anti-spam and threat-tracking initiative that gave them early insight into the scale of malicious internet traffic. Zatlyn met Prince while both were students at Harvard Business School, and the three co-founded Cloudflare with the goal of building a network that could protect websites from attacks and improve their performance simultaneously.<ref>[https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1477333/000147733319000010/0001477333-19-000010-index.htm "Cloudflare, Inc. Form S-1 Registration Statement"], ''U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission'', 2019.</ref>
Cloudflare's headquarters is located in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood of San Francisco, a district historically known for its industrial heritage and more recently for its concentration of tech companies and startups. The SoMa area, bounded by Market Street, Mission Street, and the San Francisco Bay, has become a focal point for San Francisco's tech industry, with many major corporations and venture capital firms based in the neighborhood. Cloudflare's presence in SoMa reflects the area's transformation into a hub for innovation and entrepreneurship.


The company's headquarters building, located at 555 Mission Street, is a modern office space that exemplifies the architectural trends of the SoMa district. The building's design incorporates open floor plans, natural light, and sustainable materials, aligning with the environmental values of many tech companies in the area. Proximity to public transportation, including the Caltrain and Muni Metro lines, as well as its location near major tech landmarks such as Salesforce Tower and Twitter's former headquarters, further enhances Cloudflare's strategic position in San Francisco.
The company launched publicly at TechCrunch Disrupt in September 2010, where it won the Startup Battlefield competition. Within hours of the announcement, tens of thousands of websites had signed up for the service. That early traction reflected genuine demand — businesses of all sizes were looking for affordable, easy-to-deploy protection against distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks and other threats that had previously required expensive hardware or specialized vendors.<ref>[https://techcrunch.com/2010/09/27/cloudflare-wants-to-be-the-web-bouncer-for-every-website/ "Cloudflare Wants To Be The Web Bouncer For Every Website"], ''TechCrunch'', September 27, 2010.</ref>


== Culture == 
In its earliest years, Cloudflare operated on a freemium model, offering a free tier to attract individual website owners and small businesses while charging enterprises for advanced features. This approach proved effective. The company raised a $2 million seed round in 2009, followed by a $20 million Series B in 2012 led by New Enterprise Associates.<ref>[https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1477333/000147733319000010/0001477333-19-000010-index.htm "Cloudflare, Inc. Form S-1 Registration Statement"], ''U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission'', 2019.</ref>
Cloudflare's operations in San Francisco are deeply intertwined with the city's cultural landscape, particularly its emphasis on technological innovation and community engagement. The company has participated in various local initiatives, including hackathons, coding workshops, and educational programs aimed at fostering the next generation of tech professionals. These efforts align with San Francisco's broader commitment to supporting STEM education and promoting diversity in the tech industry.


In addition to its educational outreach, Cloudflare has been involved in community projects that address local challenges, such as improving internet access for underserved populations and advocating for digital privacy rights. The company's public-facing initiatives, such as its Open Internet Project, have contributed to national conversations about internet freedom and net neutrality. These cultural contributions highlight Cloudflare's role as not just a tech company but also a civic actor in San Francisco's ongoing efforts to shape the future of the internet. 
=== Expansion and Growth (2014–2018) ===


== Notable Residents == 
By 2015, Cloudflare had grown to serve hundreds of thousands of customers and was handling a meaningful share of global internet traffic. The company expanded its product offerings well beyond basic DDoS mitigation, introducing a full-featured content delivery network (CDN), authoritative DNS management, and SSL/TLS certificate issuance. In 2014, Cloudflare launched Universal SSL, offering free HTTPS encryption to all of its customers — a move that helped push the broader web toward encrypted connections at a time when most small websites still ran on unencrypted HTTP.<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-universal-ssl/ "Introducing Universal SSL"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', September 29, 2014.</ref>
While Cloudflare is primarily known as a company rather than a residence, its founders and employees have become notable figures in San Francisco's tech community. Matthew Prince, one of the company's co-founders, has been recognized for his leadership in the cybersecurity sector and his advocacy for open-source software. Prince's work with Cloudflare has influenced the development of tools and standards that are now widely used by developers and businesses around the world.


Other key figures associated with Cloudflare include Lee Holloway and Michelle Zatlyn, who have played pivotal roles in the company's growth and strategic direction. Holloway, a former CEO of Cloudflare, has been instrumental in expanding the company's global reach, while Zatlyn, who currently serves as the company's co-founder and chairperson, has focused on fostering a culture of innovation and inclusivity within the organization. These individuals, along with many other employees, have contributed to San Francisco's reputation as a city that attracts and nurtures talent in the tech industry.
The company raised a $110 million Series D round in 2015, valuing it at roughly $1 billion and making it one of San Francisco's newest unicorn companies.<ref>[https://techcrunch.com/2015/09/22/cloudflare-raises-110-million-at-a-1-billion-valuation/ "Cloudflare Raises $110 Million At A $1 Billion Valuation"], ''TechCrunch'', September 22, 2015.</ref> That capital supported geographic expansion of its network, hiring, and product development. In 2017, Cloudflare launched Cloudflare Workers, a serverless computing platform that allows developers to run code at the network edge — meaning on Cloudflare's servers close to end users, rather than on centralized cloud infrastructure. Workers represented a significant shift in the company's identity, from a security and performance overlay to an active platform for building applications.<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-cloudflare-workers/ "Introducing Cloudflare Workers"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', September 28, 2017.</ref>


== Economy ==
=== Controversies in Content Moderation (2017–2019) ===
Cloudflare's presence in San Francisco has had a significant impact on the local economy, contributing to job creation, investment in infrastructure, and the growth of the tech sector. As one of the city's largest employers in the cybersecurity and web performance industries, Cloudflare provides employment opportunities for a diverse range of professionals, from software engineers to customer support specialists. The company's hiring practices emphasize diversity and inclusion, reflecting San Francisco's broader economic priorities. 


In addition to direct employment, Cloudflare's operations have stimulated economic activity in the SoMa neighborhood through partnerships with local businesses, real estate development, and increased demand for services such as transportation and hospitality. The company's expansion has also attracted other tech firms to the area, further solidifying SoMa's status as a major business district. According to a report by the San Francisco Economic Development Department, companies like Cloudflare have played a crucial role in maintaining the city's position as a global leader in the tech industry.
Cloudflare's scale has placed it at the center of recurring debates about whether infrastructure providers bear responsibility for the content they help deliver. In August 2017, the company terminated service to The Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi website, following public pressure in the wake of the Charlottesville attack. CEO Matthew Prince acknowledged in an internal memo that the decision was made unilaterally and without a clear policy framework. "I woke up this morning in a bad mood and decided to kick them off the internet," Prince wrote, adding that he found the lack of process troubling.<ref>[https://gizmodo.com/cloudflare-ceo-on-terminating-daily-stormer-i-woke-up-1797915234 "Cloudflare CEO on Terminating Daily Stormer: 'I Woke Up This Morning in a Bad Mood'"], ''Gizmodo'', August 16, 2017.</ref> The incident forced a public conversation about infrastructure companies as de facto arbiters of online speech.


== Attractions == 
Two years later, in August 2019, Cloudflare terminated service to 8chan, an imageboard linked to multiple mass shootings, including the El Paso attack that killed 23 people. Prince published a detailed blog post explaining the decision, describing 8chan as "a cesspool of hate" that had become "a unique danger to public safety."<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/terminating-service-for-8chan/ "Terminating Service for 8Chan"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', August 5, 2019.</ref> Both terminations were criticized by some free speech advocates and praised by others, and both illustrated the significant — and legally unregulated — power that network infrastructure providers hold over online expression.
While Cloudflare itself is not a traditional tourist attraction, its headquarters and associated events have become points of interest for visitors and locals alike. The company occasionally hosts open houses, tech expos, and public demonstrations that showcase its products and services. These events provide an opportunity for attendees to learn about the latest advancements in internet security and performance optimization.


In addition to its headquarters, Cloudflare's influence can be seen in the broader tech ecosystem of San Francisco, where the company's innovations have inspired other startups and businesses. The SoMa neighborhood, where Cloudflare is based, is home to numerous other tech companies, co-working spaces, and innovation hubs that contribute to the area's vibrant atmosphere. Visitors to San Francisco can explore these spaces to gain insight into the city's dynamic tech scene. 
=== IPO and Public Company Era (2019–Present) ===


== Getting There == 
Cloudflare went public on the New York Stock Exchange on September 13, 2019, trading under the symbol NET. The company priced its shares at $15, above its expected range, and closed its first trading day at $18, giving it a market capitalization of approximately $5.3 billion.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/13/technology/cloudflare-ipo.html "Cloudflare Rises in Market Debut"], ''The New York Times'', September 13, 2019.</ref> The IPO raised roughly $525 million. Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn remained at the helm as CEO and President, respectively.
Cloudflare's headquarters in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood is easily accessible via public transportation, making it a convenient destination for visitors and employees alike. The nearest BART station is the 16th Street Mission Station, which provides direct access to the downtown area and other parts of the city. Additionally, the Muni Metro system offers frequent service to the SoMa district, with stops at locations such as the Salesforce Transit Center and the Mission Street station.


For those traveling by car, Cloudflare's headquarters is located near several major thoroughfares, including Market Street and Mission Street, which are key arteries in San Francisco's transportation network. The area is also served by several parking garages and street parking options, though traffic congestion can be a challenge during peak hours. Ride-sharing services such as Uber and Lyft are also widely used by employees and visitors to navigate the city's complex traffic patterns.
In the years following its IPO, Cloudflare continued expanding its product portfolio. In 2020, it launched Cloudflare One, a zero trust network-as-a-service platform designed to replace traditional corporate VPNs and firewalls with cloud-native security controls.<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-cloudflare-one/ "Introducing Cloudflare One"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', October 12, 2020.</ref> In 2022, Cloudflare introduced R2 Storage, an S3-compatible object storage service with no egress fees, positioning itself directly against Amazon Web Services.<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-r2-object-storage/ "Introducing Cloudflare R2 Object Storage"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', September 28, 2021.</ref> The company reached $1.625 billion in revenue for fiscal year 2023, growing approximately 32 percent year-over-year, and reported roughly $2.09 billion in revenue for fiscal year 2024.<ref>[https://www.cloudflare.com/press/press-releases/2026/cloudflare-announces-fourth-quarter-and-fiscal-year-2025-financial-results/ "Cloudflare Announces Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Results"], ''Cloudflare'', February 2026.</ref>


== Neighborhoods == 
By early 2025, Cloudflare's global network had reached 500 terabits per second (Tbps) of external network capacity — a milestone the company described as the product of 16 years of continuous infrastructure investment.<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/500-tbps-of-capacity/ "500 Tbps of capacity: 16 years of scaling our global network"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', 2025.</ref> The network now processes more than 20 percent of all web traffic globally on a daily basis.
Cloudflare's headquarters is located in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood, a historically industrial area that has undergone significant transformation in recent decades. Once dominated by warehouses and manufacturing facilities, SoMa has become a hub for tech companies, startups, and cultural institutions. The neighborhood's proximity to the San Francisco Bay, combined with its walkability and access to public transportation, has made it an attractive location for businesses and residents alike.


The SoMa district is characterized by its mix of modern office spaces, residential developments, and public parks. Landmarks such as the Salesforce Tower, the Museum of Ice Cream, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) contribute to the area's vibrant atmosphere. Cloudflare's presence in SoMa reflects the neighborhood's role as a center for innovation and entrepreneurship, with many other tech companies and venture capital firms also based in the area. 
== Products and Services ==


== Education == 
Cloudflare's core offering began as a reverse proxy that sits between a website's origin server and its visitors, filtering malicious traffic and caching content closer to users. That basic model remains central to the business, but the product portfolio has expanded considerably.
Cloudflare has been actively involved in supporting education initiatives in San Francisco, particularly in the fields of computer science and technology. The company has partnered with local schools, universities, and non-profit organizations to provide resources, mentorship, and funding for students interested in pursuing careers in tech. These efforts include sponsoring coding bootcamps, offering internships, and participating in STEM outreach programs.


In addition to its direct involvement in education, Cloudflare has contributed to the development of open-source tools and learning platforms that are widely used by educators and students. The company's commitment to making technology accessible to all has aligned with San Francisco's broader goals of promoting equity and inclusion in the tech industry. By fostering a culture of lifelong learning, Cloudflare has helped shape the next generation of innovators and problem-solvers.
The company's DDoS protection service is among the most widely used in the industry. Cloudflare has mitigated some of the largest volumetric attacks on record — including a 3.8 Tbps attack in 2024 that the company described as the largest ever publicly disclosed.<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-mitigates-record-breaking-3-8-tbps-ddos-attack/ "Cloudflare mitigates record-breaking 3.8 Tbps DDoS attack"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', October 2024.</ref> DDoS mitigation is available on all plan tiers, including the free tier, which has made meaningful attack protection accessible to small website operators who couldn't otherwise afford it.


== Demographics == 
Cloudflare's DNS resolver, launched at the IP address 1.1.1.1 in April 2018, offers a privacy-focused alternative to ISP-provided DNS. The service does not log user IP addresses and has consistently ranked among the fastest DNS resolvers globally in independent benchmark tests.<ref>[https://blog.cloudflare.com/announcing-1111/ "Announcing 1.1.1.1: the fastest, privacy-first consumer DNS service"], ''The Cloudflare Blog'', April 1, 2018.</ref>
The workforce at Cloudflare reflects the diverse demographics of San Francisco, with employees coming from a wide range遍 of backgrounds and cultures. The company has made a concerted effort to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion within its organization, mirroring the city's commitment to social justice and representation. According to internal reports, Cloudflare's employee base includes a significant percentage of women, people of color, and individuals from various socioeconomic backgrounds.


The demographics of the SoMa neighborhood, where Cloudflare is based, also contribute to the company's diverse workforce. The area is known for its multicultural population, with a high concentration of young professionals, entrepreneurs, and tech workers. This demographic mix has helped foster a collaborative and inclusive environment at Cloudflare, where employees from different backgrounds can contribute to the company's mission of making the internet more secure and accessible for everyone.
Cloudflare Workers, introduced in 2017, allows developers to deploy JavaScript, Rust, Python, and other code at the network edge across all of Cloudflare's data centers simultaneously. It's built on the V8 JavaScript engine rather than Node.js, which allows for faster cold starts and lower memory overhead. As of 2024, the Workers platform supports several related products including Durable Objects (for stateful serverless applications), Workers KV (a globally distributed key-value store), and the R2 object storage service.


== Parks and Recreation == 
Cloudflare One, the company's zero trust security suite, bundles several enterprise security products: Cloudflare Access (identity-aware application access), Gateway (a secure DNS and HTTP proxy), the WARP corporate VPN client, and Magic Transit (which routes enterprise network traffic through Cloudflare's infrastructure for DDoS protection and performance). Together these products position Cloudflare as a competitor to traditional enterprise security vendors such as Zscaler and Palo Alto Networks.
While Cloudflare's headquarters is located in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood, the area is surrounded by several parks and recreational spaces that provide opportunities for relaxation and community engagement. among the most notable parks in the vicinity is the Mission Bay Park, which offers a range of amenities including sports facilities, walking trails, and open green spaces. This park is a popular destination for residents and visitors, offering a contrast to the urban environment of SoMa.


In addition to Mission Bay Park, the SoMa district is home to several smaller parks and plazas, such as the Salesforce Park and the South Beach Park. These spaces provide venues for public events, outdoor activities, and social gatherings, contributing to the neighborhood's vibrant atmosphere. Cloudflare's employees and local residents often take advantage of these recreational opportunities, highlighting the balance between work and leisure that characterizes life in San Francisco.
The company also operates the Cloudflare Radar platform, a public-facing tool that displays real-time internet traffic trends, routing anomalies, and outage data sourced from the company's global network. Radar has become a frequently cited resource for journalists and researchers monitoring internet health events, including regional shutdowns and BGP routing incidents.<ref>[https://radar.cloudflare.com/ "Cloudflare Radar"], ''Cloudflare'', 2025.</ref>


== Architecture ==
== Geography ==
The headquarters of Cloudflare, located at 555 Mission Street in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood, is a prime example of the modern architectural trends that define San Francisco's tech district. The building features a sleek, glass-paneled exterior that reflects the city's commitment to sustainability and innovation. Inside, the office space is designed with an emphasis on open collaboration, with large, open-plan work areas, high ceilings, and natural light. 


The architectural design of Cloudflare's headquarters aligns with the broader trends in San Francisco's commercial real estate, which prioritize flexibility, functionality, and environmental responsibility. The building incorporates energy-efficient systems, such as solar panels and smart lighting, which reduce its carbon footprint. These design choices not only enhance the employee experience but also reflect the company's values of sustainability and technological advancement.
Cloudflare's headquarters is located in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood of San Francisco, at 101 Townsend Street.<ref>[https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1477333/000147733319000010/0001477333-19-000010-index.htm "Cloudflare, Inc. Form S-1 Registration Statement"], ''U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission'', 2019.</ref> The SoMa district — roughly bounded by Market Street to the north, the Embarcadero to the east, Townsend Street to the south, and Sixth Street to the west — spent much of the twentieth century as a warehouse and light-industrial district. Beginning in the 1990s dot-com boom, it attracted technology companies drawn by relatively large floor plates, reasonable (by San Francisco standards) rents, and proximity to the Financial District. That transformation accelerated through the 2010s, and SoMa is now home to major offices for Salesforce, Twitter (now X), GitHub, and dozens of other technology firms.


{{#seo: |title=Cloudflare (Full History) — History, Facts & Guide | San Francisco.Wiki |description=Explore the full history of Cloudflare in San Francisco, including its impact on the city's economy, culture, and tech industry. |type=Article }} 
Cloudflare's 101 Townsend Street address places it in the southern portion of SoMa, close to the Caltrain station at 4th and King Streets, which provides direct rail service to Silicon Valley and is one of the most heavily used commuter rail stations in the Bay Area. The building is also a short walk from the Chase Center arena and the Mission Bay neighborhood, where UC San Francisco operates its major research campus. This part of the city has seen significant commercial and residential development since 2010, driven in part by the presence of technology employers.
[[Category:San Francisco landmarks]
 
[[Category:San Francisco history]]
The company's network has no geographic center in any traditional sense. Its 330-plus data centers are distributed globally, with major hubs in Frankfurt, London, Singapore, São Paulo, and dozens of other cities. This distributed architecture means that most internet users in the world connect to Cloudflare infrastructure located within a few dozen milliseconds of their physical location.
 
== Culture ==
 
Cloudflare's stated culture emphasizes transparency, intellectual curiosity, and a willingness to engage publicly with difficult questions — including ones the company's decisions have provoked. Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn have both written extensively on the company's blog about internal debates, product reasoning, and policy positions. That directness is somewhat unusual among infrastructure companies, which more often prefer to operate quietly in the background.
 
The company has participated in various San Francisco civic and educational initiatives, including partnerships with local schools and coding education non-profits to support computer science programs in underserved communities. These efforts reflect a broader pattern among large SoMa tech employers who have faced criticism for contributing to the city's housing costs and displacement pressures without proportionate community investment.
 
Cloudflare has also developed an internal culture that has attracted attention for both positive and negative reasons. In 2020, former customer success manager Jade E. published a widely read blog post alleging abusive management practices and retaliation after she raised internal complaints.<ref>[https://medium.com/@jadeleisey/im-a-cloudflare-employee-and-i-was-wrongfully-terminated-4bfa8f038fd8 "I'm a Cloudflare Employee and I was wrongfully terminated"], ''Medium'', 2020.</ref> Cloudflare disputed her account, and the incident generated significant public discussion about workplace culture at San Francisco technology companies.
 
== Community and Policy Initiatives ==
 
Cloudflare runs several programs designed to provide free or subsidized service to organizations with public interest missions. Project Galileo, launched in 2014, offers enterprise-grade security services at no cost to journalistic organizations, civil society groups, and human rights organizations that face cyberattacks because of their work.<ref>[https://www.cloudflare.com/galileo/ "Project Galileo"], ''Cloudflare'', 2025.</ref> As of 2024, the program protects more than 2,400 organizations across 111 countries.
 
The Athenian Project, launched in 2017, provides free DDoS protection and security services to state and local election infrastructure in the United States, including official election websites and voter registration systems.<ref>[https://www.cloudflare.com/athenian/ "The Athenian Project"], ''Cloudflare'', 2025.</ref> Election security has remained a persistent concern among government officials and researchers since the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and Cloudflare's participation represents
 
== References ==
<references />

Latest revision as of 07:05, 12 May 2026

```mediawiki Cloudflare, Inc. is a global technology company specializing in internet security, performance, and reliability services. Founded in 2009 and headquartered in San Francisco's South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood, the company operates one of the world's largest distributed networks, spanning more than 330 cities across over 120 countries as of 2025.[1] The company went public on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol NET in September 2019 and reported annual revenue of approximately $1.625 billion for fiscal year 2023, growing to roughly $2.09 billion in fiscal year 2024.[2] As a provider of infrastructure that touches a substantial share of global web traffic, Cloudflare has become a notable presence in San Francisco's technology sector and in the broader conversation about internet governance, security, and access.

History

Founding and Early Years (2009–2013)

Cloudflare was founded in 2009 by Matthew Prince, Lee Holloway, and Michelle Zatlyn. Prince and Holloway had previously worked together on Project Honey Pot, an anti-spam and threat-tracking initiative that gave them early insight into the scale of malicious internet traffic. Zatlyn met Prince while both were students at Harvard Business School, and the three co-founded Cloudflare with the goal of building a network that could protect websites from attacks and improve their performance simultaneously.[3]

The company launched publicly at TechCrunch Disrupt in September 2010, where it won the Startup Battlefield competition. Within hours of the announcement, tens of thousands of websites had signed up for the service. That early traction reflected genuine demand — businesses of all sizes were looking for affordable, easy-to-deploy protection against distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks and other threats that had previously required expensive hardware or specialized vendors.[4]

In its earliest years, Cloudflare operated on a freemium model, offering a free tier to attract individual website owners and small businesses while charging enterprises for advanced features. This approach proved effective. The company raised a $2 million seed round in 2009, followed by a $20 million Series B in 2012 led by New Enterprise Associates.[5]

Expansion and Growth (2014–2018)

By 2015, Cloudflare had grown to serve hundreds of thousands of customers and was handling a meaningful share of global internet traffic. The company expanded its product offerings well beyond basic DDoS mitigation, introducing a full-featured content delivery network (CDN), authoritative DNS management, and SSL/TLS certificate issuance. In 2014, Cloudflare launched Universal SSL, offering free HTTPS encryption to all of its customers — a move that helped push the broader web toward encrypted connections at a time when most small websites still ran on unencrypted HTTP.[6]

The company raised a $110 million Series D round in 2015, valuing it at roughly $1 billion and making it one of San Francisco's newest unicorn companies.[7] That capital supported geographic expansion of its network, hiring, and product development. In 2017, Cloudflare launched Cloudflare Workers, a serverless computing platform that allows developers to run code at the network edge — meaning on Cloudflare's servers close to end users, rather than on centralized cloud infrastructure. Workers represented a significant shift in the company's identity, from a security and performance overlay to an active platform for building applications.[8]

Controversies in Content Moderation (2017–2019)

Cloudflare's scale has placed it at the center of recurring debates about whether infrastructure providers bear responsibility for the content they help deliver. In August 2017, the company terminated service to The Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi website, following public pressure in the wake of the Charlottesville attack. CEO Matthew Prince acknowledged in an internal memo that the decision was made unilaterally and without a clear policy framework. "I woke up this morning in a bad mood and decided to kick them off the internet," Prince wrote, adding that he found the lack of process troubling.[9] The incident forced a public conversation about infrastructure companies as de facto arbiters of online speech.

Two years later, in August 2019, Cloudflare terminated service to 8chan, an imageboard linked to multiple mass shootings, including the El Paso attack that killed 23 people. Prince published a detailed blog post explaining the decision, describing 8chan as "a cesspool of hate" that had become "a unique danger to public safety."[10] Both terminations were criticized by some free speech advocates and praised by others, and both illustrated the significant — and legally unregulated — power that network infrastructure providers hold over online expression.

IPO and Public Company Era (2019–Present)

Cloudflare went public on the New York Stock Exchange on September 13, 2019, trading under the symbol NET. The company priced its shares at $15, above its expected range, and closed its first trading day at $18, giving it a market capitalization of approximately $5.3 billion.[11] The IPO raised roughly $525 million. Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn remained at the helm as CEO and President, respectively.

In the years following its IPO, Cloudflare continued expanding its product portfolio. In 2020, it launched Cloudflare One, a zero trust network-as-a-service platform designed to replace traditional corporate VPNs and firewalls with cloud-native security controls.[12] In 2022, Cloudflare introduced R2 Storage, an S3-compatible object storage service with no egress fees, positioning itself directly against Amazon Web Services.[13] The company reached $1.625 billion in revenue for fiscal year 2023, growing approximately 32 percent year-over-year, and reported roughly $2.09 billion in revenue for fiscal year 2024.[14]

By early 2025, Cloudflare's global network had reached 500 terabits per second (Tbps) of external network capacity — a milestone the company described as the product of 16 years of continuous infrastructure investment.[15] The network now processes more than 20 percent of all web traffic globally on a daily basis.

Products and Services

Cloudflare's core offering began as a reverse proxy that sits between a website's origin server and its visitors, filtering malicious traffic and caching content closer to users. That basic model remains central to the business, but the product portfolio has expanded considerably.

The company's DDoS protection service is among the most widely used in the industry. Cloudflare has mitigated some of the largest volumetric attacks on record — including a 3.8 Tbps attack in 2024 that the company described as the largest ever publicly disclosed.[16] DDoS mitigation is available on all plan tiers, including the free tier, which has made meaningful attack protection accessible to small website operators who couldn't otherwise afford it.

Cloudflare's DNS resolver, launched at the IP address 1.1.1.1 in April 2018, offers a privacy-focused alternative to ISP-provided DNS. The service does not log user IP addresses and has consistently ranked among the fastest DNS resolvers globally in independent benchmark tests.[17]

Cloudflare Workers, introduced in 2017, allows developers to deploy JavaScript, Rust, Python, and other code at the network edge across all of Cloudflare's data centers simultaneously. It's built on the V8 JavaScript engine rather than Node.js, which allows for faster cold starts and lower memory overhead. As of 2024, the Workers platform supports several related products including Durable Objects (for stateful serverless applications), Workers KV (a globally distributed key-value store), and the R2 object storage service.

Cloudflare One, the company's zero trust security suite, bundles several enterprise security products: Cloudflare Access (identity-aware application access), Gateway (a secure DNS and HTTP proxy), the WARP corporate VPN client, and Magic Transit (which routes enterprise network traffic through Cloudflare's infrastructure for DDoS protection and performance). Together these products position Cloudflare as a competitor to traditional enterprise security vendors such as Zscaler and Palo Alto Networks.

The company also operates the Cloudflare Radar platform, a public-facing tool that displays real-time internet traffic trends, routing anomalies, and outage data sourced from the company's global network. Radar has become a frequently cited resource for journalists and researchers monitoring internet health events, including regional shutdowns and BGP routing incidents.[18]

Geography

Cloudflare's headquarters is located in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood of San Francisco, at 101 Townsend Street.[19] The SoMa district — roughly bounded by Market Street to the north, the Embarcadero to the east, Townsend Street to the south, and Sixth Street to the west — spent much of the twentieth century as a warehouse and light-industrial district. Beginning in the 1990s dot-com boom, it attracted technology companies drawn by relatively large floor plates, reasonable (by San Francisco standards) rents, and proximity to the Financial District. That transformation accelerated through the 2010s, and SoMa is now home to major offices for Salesforce, Twitter (now X), GitHub, and dozens of other technology firms.

Cloudflare's 101 Townsend Street address places it in the southern portion of SoMa, close to the Caltrain station at 4th and King Streets, which provides direct rail service to Silicon Valley and is one of the most heavily used commuter rail stations in the Bay Area. The building is also a short walk from the Chase Center arena and the Mission Bay neighborhood, where UC San Francisco operates its major research campus. This part of the city has seen significant commercial and residential development since 2010, driven in part by the presence of technology employers.

The company's network has no geographic center in any traditional sense. Its 330-plus data centers are distributed globally, with major hubs in Frankfurt, London, Singapore, São Paulo, and dozens of other cities. This distributed architecture means that most internet users in the world connect to Cloudflare infrastructure located within a few dozen milliseconds of their physical location.

Culture

Cloudflare's stated culture emphasizes transparency, intellectual curiosity, and a willingness to engage publicly with difficult questions — including ones the company's decisions have provoked. Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn have both written extensively on the company's blog about internal debates, product reasoning, and policy positions. That directness is somewhat unusual among infrastructure companies, which more often prefer to operate quietly in the background.

The company has participated in various San Francisco civic and educational initiatives, including partnerships with local schools and coding education non-profits to support computer science programs in underserved communities. These efforts reflect a broader pattern among large SoMa tech employers who have faced criticism for contributing to the city's housing costs and displacement pressures without proportionate community investment.

Cloudflare has also developed an internal culture that has attracted attention for both positive and negative reasons. In 2020, former customer success manager Jade E. published a widely read blog post alleging abusive management practices and retaliation after she raised internal complaints.[20] Cloudflare disputed her account, and the incident generated significant public discussion about workplace culture at San Francisco technology companies.

Community and Policy Initiatives

Cloudflare runs several programs designed to provide free or subsidized service to organizations with public interest missions. Project Galileo, launched in 2014, offers enterprise-grade security services at no cost to journalistic organizations, civil society groups, and human rights organizations that face cyberattacks because of their work.[21] As of 2024, the program protects more than 2,400 organizations across 111 countries.

The Athenian Project, launched in 2017, provides free DDoS protection and security services to state and local election infrastructure in the United States, including official election websites and voter registration systems.[22] Election security has remained a persistent concern among government officials and researchers since the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and Cloudflare's participation represents

References

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  2. "Cloudflare Announces Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Results", Cloudflare, February 2026.
  3. "Cloudflare, Inc. Form S-1 Registration Statement", U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 2019.
  4. "Cloudflare Wants To Be The Web Bouncer For Every Website", TechCrunch, September 27, 2010.
  5. "Cloudflare, Inc. Form S-1 Registration Statement", U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 2019.
  6. "Introducing Universal SSL", The Cloudflare Blog, September 29, 2014.
  7. "Cloudflare Raises $110 Million At A $1 Billion Valuation", TechCrunch, September 22, 2015.
  8. "Introducing Cloudflare Workers", The Cloudflare Blog, September 28, 2017.
  9. "Cloudflare CEO on Terminating Daily Stormer: 'I Woke Up This Morning in a Bad Mood'", Gizmodo, August 16, 2017.
  10. "Terminating Service for 8Chan", The Cloudflare Blog, August 5, 2019.
  11. "Cloudflare Rises in Market Debut", The New York Times, September 13, 2019.
  12. "Introducing Cloudflare One", The Cloudflare Blog, October 12, 2020.
  13. "Introducing Cloudflare R2 Object Storage", The Cloudflare Blog, September 28, 2021.
  14. "Cloudflare Announces Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Results", Cloudflare, February 2026.
  15. "500 Tbps of capacity: 16 years of scaling our global network", The Cloudflare Blog, 2025.
  16. "Cloudflare mitigates record-breaking 3.8 Tbps DDoS attack", The Cloudflare Blog, October 2024.
  17. "Announcing 1.1.1.1: the fastest, privacy-first consumer DNS service", The Cloudflare Blog, April 1, 2018.
  18. "Cloudflare Radar", Cloudflare, 2025.
  19. "Cloudflare, Inc. Form S-1 Registration Statement", U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 2019.
  20. "I'm a Cloudflare Employee and I was wrongfully terminated", Medium, 2020.
  21. "Project Galileo", Cloudflare, 2025.
  22. "The Athenian Project", Cloudflare, 2025.