34 comments

  • utrack an hour ago

    They block the whole of Cloudflare R2, I believe the Docker hub is just (heh) a collateral.

    When the La Liga match starts, everything that's proxied via CF (including zero access reverse tunnels) stops working.

    There's even a website made for checking if the match is on: https://hayahora.futbol/

    You can check if your host is affected: https://hayahora.futbol/#comprobador&domain=docker-images-pr...

  • danirod 18 minutes ago

    Heh, lucky you, at least you get a message. My ISP just drops traffic to the affected IPs. No ping, no traceroute, just a spinner in the browser until it says "page not found".

    Every response and comment from LaLiga, the football organization responsible for this, has been so far that this is a minor issue that only affects a few bunch of nerds who talk about "docker images" or "github repositories" or "whatever that means".

    Meanwhile, there are testimonies of smart home devices like anti-theft alarms or automatic doors, that stop working whenever there is a football match, because their backends rely on Cloudflare.

    Last week, a woman asked for help on social media, as the GPS tracking app she uses to see where her father with dementia is, went offline during a match. It was getting late and he still wasn't back home, and she couldn't locate the tag he was wearing to find him: https://www.infobae.com/america/agencias/2026/04/05/laliga-d...

    It's hard to say this, because no one should experience an event like this, but as stressful as these are, it's the only way to make the mainstream people care about this censorship. "I cannot pull a docker image" will never be on nightly news, but safety and personal security is a more powerful driver for discourses.

  • pjc50 26 minutes ago

    This is why technology businesses and professionals need to take a little bit of an active role in local politics. Otherwise you get nonsense.

  • sigio an hour ago

    Time to use a VPN in your docker pipelines ;) Or run your systems outside of Spain.

    Or can this be avoided by using an alternate DNS?

    • darkwater an hour ago

      They are planning to also block VPN providers during football matches, see https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/la-liga-w...

      • prmoustache 8 minutes ago

        When talking about VPNs, it doesn't have to mean "third party VPN". You can host your own on any VPN service outside of Spain.

      • Mordisquitos an hour ago

        They are not "planning" to block VPNs. A technologically illiterate judge has ordered it, but there are no plans nor mechanisms to enforce it.

        • chrismustcode 25 minutes ago

          If they can block IPs of cloudflare what extra mechanisms would be needed to block VPN IPs?

          • chmod775 16 minutes ago

            The only viable way to even get most of them is to shut down internet access entirely. It's not a realistic solution, unlike blocking a few well known IP ranges belonging to a large corp like Cloudflare.

            And even if you managed to get them all beforehand, some VPN providers will adapt and keep some servers in reserve, putting them online just as you managed to block the previous ones. Getting around internet censorship is a large chunk of their business, and some are really good at it.

      • ufocia 30 minutes ago

        "A _Sanish_ Court has ordered NordVPN and Proton VPN to block IPs transmitting illegal football streams" [emphasis added], that is inspain.

    • skgsergio 26 minutes ago

      Alternate DNS doesn't help, they block at IP level.

      Yes, they block IPs belonging to CDNs (CF including R2, BunnyCDN, CDN77, Fastly, Alibaba, Akamai even)...

  • vaylian an hour ago

    This is a know issue and it is completely fucked up: https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/cloudflar...

    What Spain does is basically censorship and it's very poorly executed. The docker image registry is only one out of the many collateral victims of this stupid law.

  • jimaek an hour ago

    Off topic but I wonder when Cloudflare is going to launch their own Docker registry as a product.

    • wqtz 6 minutes ago

      Well, Cloudflare does not launch anything. They acquire to build products. Look into all their recent product launches. They acquired a relatively small company and converted the founding team to a product team.

      So, if you want them to build stuff, ask yourself, are there any "Docker Registry" startups out there. If jsdelivr/globalping is not keeping you busy enough... there is an idea

    • ImJasonH 32 minutes ago

      It's pretty easy to write your own. I made this one a while ago: https://github.com/chainguard-dev/crow-registry

    • vaylian an hour ago

      What would the business case be?

      • jimaek an hour ago

        Capture developers and funnel them to the Workers platform

  • anthk 31 minutes ago

    CF could just sue LaLiga and the judge as interrupting and intercepting telecomms it's a really serious crime in Spain. Call the AEPD too because of consumers' right against both ISP and LaLiga's snooping. Another huge fine.

    This is not an issue under the civil code (civilian issues), but something to be dealt under penal (criminal) code.

    In Spanish

    https://www.fiscal.es/memorias/memoria2020/FISCALIA_SITE/rec...

    Oh, and BTW, LaLiga has just partnered with a CF rival.

    Now CF can just sue both like hell because of unfair competition:

    https://nitter.tiekoetter.com/xataka/status/2042658662850724...

  • anthk 35 minutes ago

    Yea, La Liga it's crapping out as always. Docker needs either some I2P gateway, or a Tor service.

  • ahachete an hour ago

    Yeah, I know. Welcome to the club :(

    https://x.com/ahachete/status/2035783292549755228

  • mathfailure 44 minutes ago

    Cloudflare is cancer. And the tumor is now too big.

    • Cpoll 37 minutes ago

      You've got it backwards. Spain's ISPs are blocking Cloudflare and other CDNs because of LaLiga/football piracy. CloudFlare isn't doing anything here.

      • sph 28 minutes ago

        You are correct, but Cloudflare is still a cancer on the Internet.

        • petcat 21 minutes ago

          Rampant bot traffic and scrapers are the real cancer. Until that goes away everyone is going to need cloudflare or some other bot firewall service.

    • skgsergio 23 minutes ago

      I can agree on how much power on the global traffic they have, but this blocks affect many other CDNs like Fastly, Akamai, CDN77, BunnyCDN, Alibaba...

    • StrLght 25 minutes ago

      You made a few typos in "LaLiga"

    • petcat 36 minutes ago

      Spain is mandating their ISPs block cloudflare to stop people from illegally streaming soccer games. Cloudflare isn't the one doing the blocking.

    • ufocia 27 minutes ago

      How so?