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- John on cybersecurity

From WHAT IT'S LIKE BUILDING THE TECH, AND THE TEAM, FOR A BILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS - John & Tom · · Pause Fest & Awards

“If you don't know what Cloudflare does, you've used our services today without realizing it. You've gone to a website or used an app that uses us on the back end to protect that application or that website.”

- John
Chief Technology Officer, Cloudflare
cybersecurityinternet servicesCloudflare

On , - John, Chief Technology Officer at Cloudflare, spoke about cybersecurity during WHAT IT'S LIKE BUILDING THE TECH, AND THE TEAM, FOR A BILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS - John & Tom on Pause Fest & Awards.

WHAT IT'S LIKE BUILDING THE TECH, AND THE TEAM, FOR A BILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS - John & Tom
Watch on YouTube
WHAT IT'S LIKE BUILDING THE TECH, AND THE TEAM, FOR A BILLION-DOLLAR BUSINESS - John & Tom
Pause Fest & Awards
Watch on YouTube
John started at Cloudflare when there were about 20 employees, and he was the lone member of the London office. Today nearly ...
- John

About - John

Chief Technology Officer · Cloudflare

John Graham-Cumming stepped down as Cloudflare's CTO in March 2025 and joined the company's board of directors. In subsequent interviews, he reflected on the company's growth from 24 employees to over 1,300, describing his role as having shifted to roughly 60% outbound communication, including speaking engagements and podcasts. He stated that the hardest part of his job was firing people, saying it "really upsets me every time" and that his heart rate would spike during such conversations. He also discussed Cloudflare's culture, saying it "could have messed it up enormously" and that the company avoided early title proliferation by not creating a "senior software engineer" title. Graham-Cumming has been vocal about the impact of AI on the internet's business model, arguing that AI scrapers that provide answers without sending users to the original site "changes fundamentally the business model of the web." He noted that Cloudflare announced using the HTTP 402 "payment required" error code to allow content creators to set a price for AI crawlers. He described the current era as a "golden age for programmers" where AI assists with syntax and pitfalls, expanding the pool of people who can develop software. He also criticized CAPTCHAs as "awful" and "culturally insensitive," and highlighted Cloudflare's Turnstile product as a privacy-preserving replacement that the company gives away for free.

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