惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

爱范儿
爱范儿
E
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
F
Full Disclosure
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
T
ThreatConnect
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
C
Check Point Blog
T
Threatpost
I
Intezer
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
Project Zero
Project Zero
月光博客
月光博客
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
D
DataBreaches.Net
IT之家
IT之家
Malwarebytes
Malwarebytes
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
P
Privacy International News Feed
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
量子位
李成银的技术随笔
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
美团技术团队
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
T
Tor Project blog
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
博客园 - 司徒正美
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
C
Comments on: Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Security Latest
Security Latest
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
The Cloudflare Blog
H
Help Net Security
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main

The Cloudflare Blog

The day my ping took countermeasures Announcing Claude Compliance API support with Cloudflare CASB Announcing Claude Managed Agents on Cloudflare Project Glasswing: what Mythos showed us Our billing pipeline was suddenly slow. The culprit was a hidden bottleneck in ClickHouse Browser Run: now running on Cloudflare Containers, it’s faster and more scalable When "idle" isn't idle: how a Linux kernel optimization became a QUIC bug Building For The Future How Cloudflare responded to the “Copy Fail” Linux vulnerability When DNSSEC goes wrong: how we responded to the .de TLD outage Code Orange: Fail Small is complete. The result is a stronger Cloudflare network Introducing Dynamic Workflows: durable execution that follows the tenant Post-quantum encryption for Cloudflare IPsec is generally available Agents can now create Cloudflare accounts, buy domains, and deploy Shutdowns, power outages, and conflict: a review of Q1 2026 Internet disruptions Making Rust Workers reliable: panic and abort recovery in wasm‑bindgen Moving past bots vs. humans Building the agentic cloud: everything we launched during Agents Week 2026 The AI engineering stack we built internally — on the platform we ship Orchestrating AI Code Review at scale Introducing the Agent Readiness score. Check to see if your site is agent-ready Shared Dictionaries: compression that keeps up with the agentic web Redirects for AI Training enforces canonical content Unweight: how we compressed an LLM 22% without sacrificing quality Agents that remember: introducing Agent Memory Agents Week: network performance update Introducing Flagship: feature flags built for the age of AI Cloudflare’s AI Platform: an inference layer designed for agents Building the foundation for running extra-large language models AI Search: the search primitive for your agents Deploy Postgres and MySQL databases with PlanetScale + Workers Artifacts: versioned storage that speaks Git Email for agents - Cloudflare Email Service now in public beta Project Think: building the next generation of AI agents on Cloudflare Introducing Agent Lee - a new interface to the Cloudflare stack Register domains wherever you build: Cloudflare Registrar API now in beta Browser Run: give your agents a browser Rearchitecting the Workflows control plane for the agentic era Add voice to your agent Managed OAuth for Access: make internal apps agent-ready in one click Securing non-human identities: automated revocation, OAuth, and scoped permissions Scaling MCP adoption: Our reference architecture for simpler, safer and cheaper enterprise deployments of MCP Secure private networking for everyone: users, nodes, agents, Workers — introducing Cloudflare Mesh Building a CLI for all of Cloudflare Durable Objects in Dynamic Workers: Give each AI-generated app its own database Agents have their own computers with Sandboxes GA Dynamic, identity-aware, and secure Sandbox auth Welcome to Agents Week 500 Tbps of capacity: 16 years of scaling our global network From bytecode to bytes- automated magic packet generation Cloudflare targets 2029 for full post-quantum security How we built Organizations to help enterprises manage Cloudflare at scale Why we're rethinking cache for the AI era Our ongoing commitment to privacy for the 1.1.1.1 public DNS resolver Introducing EmDash — the spiritual successor to WordPress that solves plugin security Introducing Programmable Flow Protection: custom DDoS mitigation logic for Magic Transit customers Cloudflare Client-Side Security: smarter detection, now open to everyone How we use Abstract Syntax Trees (ASTs) to turn Workflows code into visual diagrams A one-line Kubernetes fix that saved 600 hours a year Sandboxing AI agents, 100x faster Inside Gen 13- how we built our most powerful server yet Launching Cloudflare’s Gen 13 servers- trading cache for cores for 2x edge compute performance Powering the agents: Workers AI now runs large models, starting with Kimi K2.5 Introducing Custom Regions for precision data control Standing up for the open Internet- why we appealed Italy’s Piracy Shield fine From legacy architecture to Cloudflare One Announcing Cloudflare Account Abuse Protection: prevent fraudulent attacks from bots and humans Slashing agent token costs by 98% with RFC 9457-compliant error responses AI Security for Apps is now generally available Building a security overview dashboard for actionable insights Investigating multi-vector attacks in Log Explorer Translating risk insights into actionable protection: leveling up security posture with Cloudflare and Mastercard Fixing request smuggling vulnerabilities in Pingora OSS deployments Active defense: introducing a stateful vulnerability scanner for APIs Complexity is a choice. SASE migrations shouldn’t take years. From the endpoint to the prompt: a unified data security vision in Cloudflare One Ending the "silent drop": how Dynamic Path MTU Discovery makes the Cloudflare One Client more resilient A QUICker SASE client: re-building Proxy Mode How Automatic Return Routing solves IP overlap Always-on detections: eliminating the WAF “log versus block” trade-off Mind the gap: new tools for continuous enforcement from boot to login Stop reacting to breaches and start preventing them with User Risk Scoring Defeating the deepfake: stopping laptop farms and insider threats Moving from license plates to badges: the Gateway Authorization Proxy Evolving Cloudflare’s Threat Intelligence Platform: actionable, scalable, and ETL-less Introducing the 2026 Cloudflare Threat Report See risk, fix risk: introducing Remediation in Cloudflare CASB How Cloudy translates complex security into human action From reactive to proactive: closing the phishing gap with LLMs Modernizing with agile SASE: a Cloudflare One blog takeover Beyond the blank slate: how Cloudflare accelerates your Zero Trust journey The truly programmable SASE platform Toxic combinations: when small signals add up to a security incident We deserve a better streams API for JavaScript The most-seen UI on the Internet? Redesigning Turnstile and Challenge Pages ASPA: making Internet routing more secure Bringing more transparency to post-quantum usage, encrypted messaging, and routing security How we rebuilt Next.js with AI in one week Cloudflare One is the first SASE offering modern post-quantum encryption across the full platform Cloudflare outage on February 20, 2026
Remote Work Isn’t Just Video Conferencing: How We Built CloudflareTV
Cloudflare Team · 2020-03-20 · via The Cloudflare Blog

At Cloudflare, we produce all types of video content, ranging from recordings of our Weekly All-Hands to product demos. Being able to stream video on demand has two major advantages when compared to live video:

  1. It encourages asynchronous communication within the organization

  2. It extends the life time value of the shared knowledge

Historically, we haven’t had a central, secure repository of all video content that could be easily accessed from the browser. Various teams choose their own platform to share the content. If I wanted to find a recording of a product demo, for example, I’d need to search Google Drive, Gmail and Google Chat with creative keywords. Very often, I would need to reach out to individual teams to finally locate the content.

So we decided we wanted to build CloudflareTV, an internal Netflix-like application that can only be accessed by Cloudflare employees and has all of our videos neatly organized and immediately watchable from the browser.

We wanted to achieve the following when building CloudflareTV:

  • Security: make sure the videos are access controlled and not publicly accessible

  • Authentication: ensure the application can only be accessed by Cloudflare employees

  • Tagging: allow the videos to be categorized so they can be found easily

  • Originless: build the entire backend using Workers and Stream so we don’t need separate infrastructure for encoding, storage and delivery

Securing the videos using signed URLs

Every video uploaded to Cloudflare Stream can be locked down by requiring signed URLs. A Stream video can be marked as requiring signed URLs using the UI or by making an API call:

Once locked down in this way videos can’t be accessed directly. Instead, they can only be accessed using a temporary token.

In order to create signed tokens, we must first make an API call to create a key:

curl -X POST -H "X-Auth-Email: {$EMAIL}" -H "X-Auth-Key: {$AUTH_KEY}"  "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/{$ACCOUNT_ID}/media/keys"

The API call will return a JSON object similar to this:

{
  "result": {
    "id": "...",
    "pem": "...",
    "jwk": "...",
    "created": "2020-03-10T18:17:00.075188052Z"
  },
  "success": true,
  "errors": [],
  "messages": []
}

We can use the id and pem values in a Workers script that takes a video ID and returns a signed token that expires after 1 hour:

async function generateToken(video_id) {
var exp_time = Math.round((new Date()).getTime() / 1000)+3600;

    const key_data = {
        'id': '{$KEY_ID}',
        'pem': '{$PEM}',
        'exp': exp_time
    }

    let response = await fetch('https://util.cloudflarestream.com/sign/'+video_id, {
        method: 'POST',
        body: JSON.stringify(key_data)
    });
    let token_value = await response.text();
    return token_value;
}

The returned signed token should look something like this:

eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6IjExZDM5ZjEwY2M0NGY1NGE4ZDJlMjM5OGY3YWVlOGYzIn0.eyJzdWIiOiJiODdjOWYzOTkwYjE4ODI0ZTYzMTZlMThkOWYwY2I1ZiIsImtpZCI6IjExZDM5ZjEwY2M0NGY1NGE4ZDJlMjM5OGY3YWVlOGYzIiwiZXhwIjoiMTUzNzQ2MDM2NSIsIm5iZiI6IjE1Mzc0NTMxNjUifQ.C1BEveKi4XVeZk781K8eCGsMJrhbvj4RUB-FjybSm2xiQntFi7AqJHmj_ws591JguzOqM1q-Bz5e2dIEpllFf6JKK4DMK8S8B11Vf-bRmaIqXQ-QcpizJfewNxaBx9JdWRt8bR00DG_AaYPrMPWi9eH3w8Oim6AhfBiIAudU6qeyUXRKiolyXDle0jaP9bjsKQpqJ10K5oPWbCJ4Nf2QHBzl7Aasu6GK72hBsvPjdwTxdD5neazdxViMwqGKw6M8x_L2j2bj93X0xjiFTyHeVwyTJyj6jyPwdcOT5Bpuj6raS5Zq35qgvffXWAy_bfrWqXNHiQdSMOCNa8MsV8hljQsh

Stream provides an embed code for each video. The “src” attribute of the embed code typically contains the video ID. But if the video is private, instead of setting the “src” attribute to the video ID, you set it to the signed token value:

<stream src="eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6IjExZDM5ZjEwY2M0NGY1NGE4ZDJlMjM5OGY3YWVlOGYzIn0.eyJzdWIiOiJiODdjOWYzOTkwYjE4ODI0ZTYzMTZlMThkOWYwY2I1ZiIsImtpZCI6IjExZDM5ZjEwY2M0NGY1NGE4ZDJlMjM5OGY3YWVlOGYzIiwiZXhwIjoiMTUzNzQ2MDM2NSIsIm5iZiI6IjE1Mzc0NTMxNjUifQ.C1BEveKi4XVeZk781K8eCGsMJrhbvj4RUB-FjybSm2xiQntFi7AqJHmj_ws591JguzOqM1q-Bz5e2dIEpllFf6JKK4DMK8S8B11Vf-bRmaIqXQ-QcpizJfewNxaBx9JdWRt8bR00DG_AaYPrMPWi9eH3w8Oim6AhfBiIAudU6qeyUXRKiolyXDle0jaP9bjsKQpqJ10K5oPWbCJ4Nf2QHBzl7Aasu6GK72hBsvPjdwTxdD5neazdxViMwqGKw6M8x_L2j2bj93X0xjiFTyHeVwyTJyj6jyPwdcOT5Bpuj6raS5Zq35qgvffXWAy_bfrWqXNHiQdSMOCNa8MsV8hljQsh" controls></stream>
<script data-cfasync="false" defer type="text/javascript" src="https://embed.videodelivery.net/embed/r4xu.fla9.latest.js"></script>

Tagging videos

We would like to categorize videos uploaded to Stream by tagging them. This can be done by updating the video object’s meta field and passing it arbitrary JSON data. To categorize a video, we simply update the meta field with a comma-delimited list of tags:

curl -X POST  -d '{"uid": "VIDEO_ID", "meta": {"tags": "All Hands,Stream"}}' "https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/{$ACCOUNT_ID}/stream/{$VIDEO_ID}"  -H "X-Auth-Email: {$EMAIL}"  -H "X-Auth-Key: {$ACCOUNT_KEY}"  -H "Content-Type: application/json"

Later, we will create a getVideos Worker function to fetch a list of videos and all associated data so we can render the UI. The tagging data we just set for this video will be included in the video data returned by the Worker.

Fetching Video Data using Workers

The heart of the UI is a list of videos. How do we get this list of videos programmatically? Stream provides an endpoint that returns all the videos and any metadata associated with them.

First, we set up environment variables for our Worker:

Next, we wrote a simple Workers function to call the Stream API and return a list of videos, eliminating the need for an origin:

async function getVideos() {
    const headers = {
        'X-Auth-Key': CF_KEY,
        'X-Auth-Email': CF_EMAIL
    }

    let response = await fetch(“https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/accounts/” + CF_ACCOUNT_ID + '/stream', {
        headers: headers
    });
    let video_list = await response.text();
    return video_list;
}

Lastly, we set up a zone and within the zone, we set up a Worker routes pointing to our Workers script. This can be done from the Workers tab:

Authenticating using Cloudflare Access

Finally, we want to restrict access to CloudflareTV to people within the organization. We can do this using Cloudflare Access, available under the Access tab.

To restrict access to CloudflareTV, we must do two things:

  1. Add a new login method

  2. Add an access policy

To add a new login method, click the “+” icon and choose your identity provider. In our case, we chose Google:

You will see a pop up asking for information including Client ID and Client Secret, both key pieces of information required to set up Google as the identity provider.

Once we add an identity provider, we want to tell Access “who specifically should be allowed to access our application?” This is done by creating an Access Policy.

We set up an Access Policy to only allow emails ending in our domain name. This effectively makes CloudflareTV only accessible by our team!

What’s next?

If you have interesting ideas around video, Cloudflare Stream lets you focus on your idea while it handles storage, encoding and the viewing experience for your users. Coupled that with Access and Workers, you can build powerful applications. Here are the docs to help you get started: