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&lt;p class="std-text">The clock is ticking. The global Internet community has exactly 30 days to critique the &lt;strong>2025 IANA Performance Matrix&lt;/strong> before the deadline hits March 6, 2026. This isn&amp;#039;t just another review cycle; it&amp;#039;s the friction point where theoretical governance slams into the operational reality of &lt;strong>Public Technical Identifiers&lt;/strong> managing root zone data. If we don&amp;#039;t bring rigorous, data-backed scrutiny to this window, the post-2016 multi-stakeholder model devolves into a bureaucratic rubber stamp.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Cloudflare performance: Why 60% of networks now lead</title><link>https://wirez.top/posts/cloudflare-performance-why-60-of-networks-now-lead/</link><pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://wirez.top/posts/cloudflare-performance-why-60-of-networks-now-lead/</guid><description>&lt;meta charset="utf-8">
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&lt;p class="std-text">&lt;a href="https://www.cloudflare.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Cloudflare&lt;/a> now leads 60% of the top 1,000 global networks in speed, a massive jump from just 40% last year. (Cloudflare&amp;#039;s network performance update developer week 2025) This isn&amp;#039;t magic; it&amp;#039;s math. By anchoring performance definitions in &lt;strong>Real User Measurement&lt;/strong> and the &lt;strong>trimean metric&lt;/strong>, we stop chasing theoretical throughput and start fixing actual user pain. The data shows Cloudflare outperforming Akamai and Fastly in global benchmarks, driven by an &lt;strong>HTTP/3 architecture&lt;/strong> that shaves milliseconds where it counts.&lt;/p></description></item></channel></rss>