Agents can now create Cloudflare accounts, buy domains, and deploy

(blog.cloudflare.com)

346 points | by rolph 8 hours ago ago

195 comments

  • _pdp_ 5 hours ago

    The reason this blog post does not come with any concrete examples how to use this enablement for useful and constructive things tells you something very important - it is a toy and they do not know who and how they will use it.

    It is cool feature but to what end? Buying a domain is not something you have to do daily to require any kind of automation.

    I am also not sure who Stripe Atlas for. I am genuinely confused. It is definitely not something a developer will use.

    I understand that you can bootstrap a number of systems but that is like half-hour of work and arguably it is probably a good idea to do it manually to make sure you have strong foundations.

    I've have personally never seen a good example where a cross vendor account provisioning actually working. For example, Fly.io used to provision Sentry accounts automatically which you could not access in any other way but through Fly.io. I mean the Sentry account was effectively locked to a project that you cannot transfer - hijacking the actual global alias as well. Vercel did something similar with PostgreSQL via Neon and Redis via Upstash resulting in painful migration processes.

    I can imagine ending in some kind of deadlock between services due to security hence why the 30 minutes initial setup is kind of time well spent to avoid future issues.

    Maybe it's me.

    • grey-area 5 hours ago

      Perfect for spammers, scammers and domain squatters, who can now automate their activities even more.

      Can’t think of any other uses for this given the current state of LLM ā€˜agents’, though I can’t wait for the next report of something like ā€˜openclaw registered 1000 domains for me without asking and now cloudflare won’t refund me’.

      • Yizahi 2 hours ago

        LLM generation in general provides the most use to scammers and the like. Generate emails which people won't read, generate articles which are just honeypots or rip-offs, generate images to said articles, generate more and more spam.

        Every legit use case for LLM practically requires that human would verify the result manually, at least briefly. But spammers can enjoy skipping that step, since content was never a main priority in the first place.

      • riedel 5 hours ago

        And cloudflare can actually sell them priority access to pass their bot protection or introduce micropaiments for agents access content. I feel cloudflare is getting a bit scary tbh. It is like your friendly bot net.

        • dwroberts 41 minutes ago

          This made me realise they’re doing the same thing the AI labs are doing: selling both the problem and the solution.

          They are arming spammers and scammers with these tools so you need their product to protect yourself from them

          • cyanydeez 19 minutes ago

            Welcome to the grift economy.

        • dragonelite 2 hours ago

          It's the western great fire wall, good thing the things within the fire wall is huge and encapsulate still most of the world.

        • adamas 3 hours ago

          I mean, Cloudflare was always kind of scary. They filter the world wide web, literally.

      • sshine 4 hours ago

        The DNS provider I recently switched to surprised me with a policy:

        To create records for more than one domain, you need to write a personal support email.

        They say it's to raise DNSSEC awareness, but I think it's also a robot captcha.

        • mapkkk 2 hours ago

          Are you perchance talking about deSEC? I've also switched to them, and thought that it was too much work to send an email and wait for replies, so I ended up using dummy inboxes for my other, lesser important domains.

          Though I guess it's still a good thing they do this? At the time I remember being mildly inconvenienced, but not enough to actually care. I just remember thinking, "How is this nonprofit going to handle all that support volume?".

        • impjohn 3 hours ago

          That kind of captcha has a very short half life. Software ate the world now AI is eating software

        • kreco 3 hours ago

          > To create records for more than one domain, you need to write a personal support email.

          I'm not all familiar with this so I don't understand why it's not a ticket or any other non-automated action even for a single domain ?

          I mean what is "the standard" that would actually allow a robot to register a domain to a DNS registry ?

    • mpeg 3 hours ago

      I think this post needs to be put in context, for months now Cloudflare has been releasing products that allow their whole platform to be usable by agents with the main objective of enabling their customers to dynamically write code using Cloudflare, this is just another step.

      For example, you can now with Artifacts and Dynamic Workers make a lovable-style SaaS where your customers ask the AI agent to write software for them, the agent can run it in sandboxes with no build step, it can version it with a git-compatible API, and now you can even have it buy a domain for the end customer or set up their own cloudflare account when they want to move to production.

      I personally have no use case for creating domains via agents, but some of the other features they're releasing around this area are extremely useful and I've started to ship internal tools for my clients where they are used, like giving them their own mini claude code that only does one thing – one I shipped last week was an agentic interface for Salesforce reports that understands their domain better (and all the undocumented tech debt) than the built-in Salesforce AI does and therefore manages the context better

    • konschubert 36 minutes ago

      I’m not saying that you’re wrong.

      But it’s worth noting that any good technology starts off being called a toy and with most people not being able to imagine its usefulness.

    • ascorbic 4 hours ago

      People use agents to deploy sites all the time. Buying a domain is part of that if you want to build a site that's beyond a toy. Allowing agents to do a task isn't just for things you do every day – it's also for things you do rarely and need agents' help. It's not just devs using agents to perform these sort of tasks anymore.

      Stripe Atlas makes it massively easier for startups to incorporate in Delaware. This is particularly hard for non-US founders. It solves a real problem. I don't think this part will be done by agents though!

      Disclaimer: I work at Cloudflare but not on this

      • lejalv 4 hours ago

        Lets remind the purpose of incorporating in Delaware is legal tax evasion, so that we don't not have pensions, health insurance or anything nice, really.

        Rename to Greedware.

        • nerdsniper 26 minutes ago

          The primary purpose of incorporating in Delaware is less about taxes and more that Delaware is the "Silicon Valley" of corporate law - incredible concentration of professionals, infrastructure, and intangibles. Any dispute you have will generally be handled better, faster, and cheaper by Delaware courts than they would be anywhere else. I'll quote my good friend who is a startup M&A lawyer: "I'd go so far as to say that it would be managerial malpractice to incorporate anywhere other than Delaware."

        • ascorbic 4 hours ago

          Investors usually expect that non-US founders incorporate in the US, and usually expect Delaware. There are other states that are more friendly to tax avoidance. Delaware is mostly preferred because it's a known quantity with mature regulation. Investors don't want to deal with dozens of different legal regimes, they want the one that they know about.

          • jrflowers an hour ago

            do you work on a cloudflare delaware-awareness project? Delawareness?

        • pembrook 3 hours ago

          No, it’s not. Companies have to pay taxes where they operate regardless of what state they incorporated in.

          Stop spreading populist internet bullshit.

          Incorporating in Delaware is like 95% about being in a predictable legal framework for any business related dispute imaginable.

          • Yizahi an hour ago

            Uhuh. And in other places, companies are incorporating in Ireland or Luxembourg or other similar tax evasion heavens because of the "predictable legal framework" too. Lol.

            • sudofox an hour ago

              Right, and in other countries they have different laws. In the USA they also pay taxes where they operate. That's how it works.

      • makeitdouble 4 hours ago

        Wouldn't it be critical if the agent botched the domain purchase in weird ways ?

        Short of throwaway sites (spam etc) it's hard to imagine skimping time on this specific, mostly painless part.

        • barnabee 3 hours ago

          People are skimping time in every part.

          I am watching people who can't code build and deploy dashboards and sites with Claude Code (desktop app - they don't use the CLI), then go cap in hand to developer friends to get it hosted on a domain (rather than some Vercel or whatever URL).

          Those people absolutely want to risk letting an agent buy and set up the domain.

          This is not necessarily as blindly stupid as you might think. Many of these people know that this workflow is no good for writing code that does anything serious (i.e. storing data for people, taking payments, etc.) but there are a huge number of projects that are just websites, dashboard, data visualisations, etc. with static content and public APIs (Twitter is awash with them) and domains are cheap.

          A decent minority of these are even quite cool or interesting.

          So a lot of people want to put their vibe-coded weekend project behind a nice domain. Why not?

        • ascorbic 4 hours ago

          If the rest of your deployment flow is via the agent, needing to switch over to a different context and open up a browser and login (or create an account) and buy the domain absolutely is a bump in the road.

      • sshine 4 hours ago

        > it's also for things you do rarely and need agents' help

        I recently set up DNSSEC for the first time.

        It really was just a bunch of copy-paste from one provider to another.

        I like to understand what I'm doing, and LLMs helped greatly with that.

        But it was copy-pasting screenshots into chat, so not really agentic.

        • ElFitz 3 hours ago

          Last time (after years of doing it manually every once in a while) I just gave codex an ephemeral restricted Cloudflare API Token / key / whatever, the screenshot, and it set up all the records on its own.

    • rco8786 21 minutes ago

      > I am also not sure who Stripe Atlas for.

      This was such a weird mention to see in the article. Stripe Atlas is a service that helps new businesses incorporate and onboard onto Stripe/partner services with some startup credits. It's been around forever, has nothing to do with AI, and is generally a very well-respected service.

    • nerdsniper 44 minutes ago

      > I am also not sure who Stripe Atlas for.

      It's for founders who don't have lawyers. My co-founder and I are both developers, we used Stripe Atlas to incorporate a C-Corp due to expecting to fundraise <1 year after incorporation. Stripe Atlas generates about 200 pages of legal boilerplate documents with very sane defaults so that your corporate structure, bylaws, IP protections, director indemnity, etc. align well with investor expectations. It helps investors not have to "rules-lawyer" all your corporate records during due-diligence, because their content exactly matches YC's expectations.

      -------

      I said we made a C-Corp but other founders should default to LLC. An LLC is superior to C-Corp in pretty much every way for any pre-raise founders who don't have an extra $2,000 to >$10,000/year they're willing to part with for higher franchise taxes, "foreign" (different state) corporation registration, CPA's, and additionally lawyers if any investments aren't YC SAFE's (e.g. not YC, Neo, or A16Z SpeedRun).

      Also note that for pre-revenue C-Corps, Delaware franchise taxes are scaled against number of shares, not company revenue or # of employees, so you can save some money by forming your company with 1,000,000 shares and then file a "Unanimous action of the board of directors" to increase it to 10,000,000 just before angel/pre-seed/seed round, and potentially save a few hundred dollars on your first year franchise taxes, depending on when you incorporate and raise. But if a few hundred dollars makes a difference to you, incorporating as an LLC instead of a C-Corp is the only defensible decision.

      And as always, start your taxes 3-4 months before they're due. If you want a CPA to do them (which you should if you have any revenue), you'll need to retain them way ahead of time for C-Corps. If you're filling tax forms out yourself, you'll want to start at least a month before they're due.

    • huijzer 3 hours ago

      My biggest hesitation with these things is that there is no limit to the possible bill I may receive when the agent goes haywire. Cloudflare doesn’t see this as a problem of course.

      • input_sh an hour ago

        There's a whole payment section in the submitted article which addresses your concern, perhaps you should read it.

      • philipallstar 2 hours ago

        It's not Cloudflare's job to see what you choose to buy as a problem.

        • brazzy an hour ago

          I'd assume they want to limit the number of bills that will get disputed.

    • dizhn 23 minutes ago

      This when their web GUI only allows buying one domain name at a time.

    • aniviacat 2 hours ago

      I assume the constructive use case is some non-techy person asking ChatGPT.

      > Hey, please make me a website about my dog woofy. Give it the link myfluffywoofy.dog ;) Thank you!

    • compounding_it 5 hours ago

      > to what end?

      People making cooking websites, websites for their garden, etc usually have nowhere to go. A web app who is an agent for a customer will then deploy agents in the backend to deploy the website too.

      Basically what one would do manually, you tell one agent to make another agent do it.

      Meta agents are where are going it seems.

      • tdeck 4 hours ago

        > People making cooking websites, websites for their garden, etc usually have nowhere to go.

        They've had WYSIWYG website builders since the late 1990s.

        • carlosjobim 9 minutes ago

          They don't have anymore. At least not since Artisteer shut down.

      • mook 3 hours ago

        > People making cooking websites, websites for their garden, etc usually have nowhere to go.

        You know, I kind of miss Geocities too.

      • Gigachad 2 hours ago

        Sadly they will be publishing on a web which has no human readers anymore because it’s been crowded out by 5 trillion AI slop gardening websites. And the only visitors will be other AI scraper bots.

        Any actual readers will be on platforms which combat the bot spam.

      • Fomite 3 hours ago

        While large social media sites have captured lots of traffic, etc. I've had small websites for a local wargaming club, a very modest blog, etc. for decades requiring little or no technical expertise.

        The idea that people who want modest websites need active agentic systems to do that is a really odd take.

    • lxgr 4 hours ago

      > Buying a domain is not something you have to do daily to require any kind of automation.

      Which is arguably unfortunate, as it nudges people towards using centralized services because they simply don't know that they have the option to register one.

      For example, why not self-host a single-page party invitation site designed by an agent rather than using Facebook or Instagram?

      • ACCount37 4 hours ago

        A lot of what enabled Web 1.0 was how easy it was for an average web user to create his own website.

        An average web user got far less technical since, and making a website got harder instead.

        Now, if anyone could just ask an AI agent to set up a website, and get a personal page with an e-mail inbox and a domain - all reasonably secure, TLS set up, billing added as +$5 per year to the AI subscription bundle? Maybe that would help some.

        • lxgr 3 hours ago

          Yes, this is exactly my hope too. Many hacker/cypherpunk ideas failed or never reached wide adoption because they were just too complicated for regular people: GPG/web of trust, self-hosting websites and email, having your own custom software for personal tasks…

          Instead, everybody ended up using Gmail, iMessage/WhatsApp, and Facebook, and things are as centralized as they can be.

          Agents could be a force in breaking that trend. Even if inference stays centralized, the artifacts agents create would not be. Basically the difference between everybody renting from one of a handful apartment building mega corps or being able to hire contractors to build your own things according to your ideas.

          And just like there, it’ll probably help a lot to know a bit about how the sausage is made to not be taken advantage of. Also, many people will probably always continue to rent, which is fine. But the possibility of agent competition alone will hopefully keep centralized platforms and SaaS offerings on their toes, which is good for their users.

          • disiplus 32 minutes ago

            The problem is not website, the problem is discovery and discovery is on Instagram, TikTok, and social networks. You don't have any incentive to build a website for a regular audience. What you might do is build an audience on a social network and then try to move them to a website.

            But at that point you're big enough to build it properly.

    • barnabee 3 hours ago

      A lot of good and interesting things started out as toys

      We should build more toys

      • jeremyjh 35 minutes ago

        I don't think there are a lot in the SAAS world. Usually when something quirky and new launches, readers on this website can discern something about useful intent.

        Arguably Github, Slack, Twitch, TikTok were basically toys at launch with a lot of people questioning possible market fit.

        But there is a difference between those products - and for example - everything that came out of the crypto blockchain scene. This new product by Cloudflare feels more in the latter camp than the former.

    • frevib 3 hours ago

      > I've have personally never seen a good example where a cross vendor account provisioning actually working.

      At enterprise level, account provisioning with SCIM is the industry standard.

    • Eufrat 4 hours ago

      > It is cool feature but to what end?

      Doesn’t this sum up most of the AI ā€œinnovationsā€ we’ve seen shoveled in this bubble?

      We constantly see AI thought leaders backpeddling on promises and just spouting general nonsense. Altman originally talked effusively about an era of ā€œabundanceā€. An abundance of what? It’s a word salad of feel good vibes without any substance.

      Sam Altman has gone from claiming AI might cure cancer to shoveling ads and the scope of AI seems to be reduced to mostly be suitable as flawed, imperfect, but mildly useful coding/automation agents that are likely subsidized beyond economic viability, but you can’t point that out because it’s the future!

    • zsoltkacsandi an hour ago

      > The reason this blog post does not come with any concrete examples how to use this enablement for useful and constructive things tells you something very important - it is a toy and they do not know who and how they will use it.

      Every time I come across AI projects and AI integrations (including my previous job where I full-time worked on one), no one was able to show me concrete examples how can I use it for constructive things.

    • nailer 2 hours ago

      > Buying a domain is not something you have to do daily to require any kind of automation

      I wrote a python client for dnsimple nearly 16 years ago to exactly that. If you can’t think of a reason it’s useful, you may wish to get your agent to buy a domain for some project you have asked to create.

    • hulitu 4 hours ago

      > it is a toy and they do not know who and how they will use it.

      Just like it is usually used: spam and (D)DoS

    • cromka 5 hours ago

      > Buying a domain is not something you have to do daily to require any kind of automation.

      Sorry, but no, you totally miss the fact there are domain farms which buy the dropped domains and then offer them up for sale. Bots now use AI to analyze the domain's value and automate the whole process. To be able to let AI buy it as well likely offers a tremendous amount of time saving.

      • przmk 5 hours ago

        It offers value to parasites who buy domains and resell them?

        • estimator7292 5 hours ago

          Cloudflare gets a cut though, so it's valuable. As long as number go up, all good

          • adventured 4 hours ago

            Cloudflare operates as an at-cost registrar. They charge wholesale prices for domains.

            What cut are you talking about?

            • pocksuppet 4 hours ago

              They may be wrong on that particular point, but Cloudflare definitely profits from increased crime as it drives increased sales of Cloudflare's security products. There are rumors they even knowingly help protect DDoS botnets because they benefit from there being more DDoS.

      • 2000UltraDeluxe 5 hours ago

        It's not like there aren't others who sell domains with an API. This doesn't change that much.

      • Griffinsauce 5 hours ago

        So actively making the internet worse. Awesome.

      • misnome 5 hours ago

        Hasn’t all that been automated by people for decades anyway?

        I guess this, lowers the barrier to entry for this extremely specific niche?

      • dawnerd 4 hours ago

        And that goes back way further than AI. We were doing some crazy stuff at Demand Media with enom and all their fake content sites.

      • fontain 5 hours ago

        Complete and utter nonsense.

        Domain registration is already API driven and has been for decades. The most sophisticated domain name investors (or "domain farms") go as far as to own registrars directly so they have instant access to the registries. Nobody involved in domains would use Cloudflare's product because they already have and have had automations for decades.

        For example, DropCatch (NameBright) own over 1,000 different registrars so that they have over 1,000 direct routes to Verisign's .com registry. GName are a new player in the space, approaching 1,000 registrars. The amount these companies spend on their registrar licensing alone is many millions of dollars[1].

        Cloudflare's product adds nothing new to the world of domains. Anyone has been able to go to OpenSRS and sign up as a reseller with API access for over 20 years.

        [1] The majority of ICANN's registrar revenue comes from just a few companies that own thousands of registrars collectively: https://www.iana.org/assignments/registrar-ids/registrar-ids... cmd + f "DropCatch" and "GName"

    • terrytys 5 hours ago

      lol, there are lots of people who aren't developers.

    • nottorp 4 hours ago

      It's a sales tool.

      You can tell Claude to add a new condition to an if and instead it will duplicate the whole if body.

      They're hoping you'll tell your "agent" to buy a domain and it will buy 30 instead.

  • jackconsidine 7 hours ago

    That is ironic. Four years ago, cloudflare didn’t let human me have an account / buy domains because I signed up, never used a single service but didn’t respond to a request to verify my drivers license

    > This account is in violation of Cloudflare's Terms of Service. Specifically fraud. The suspension is permanent.

    (Yes that’s really it. Sincerely. No ā€œbut I also abused Xā€)

    • nojs 6 hours ago

      This conflict is popping up everywhere. There is a push by a lot of companies to allow agentic use of their services (and new companies explicitly offering "X for agents"), ignoring the fact that "agent" means the same thing as "bot" which we've spent the last couple of decades actively filtering out. Will be interesting to see how it plays out.

      • janalsncm 6 hours ago

        In defense of old-school bots, we had to code them up by hand.

      • Gigachad 5 hours ago

        The future is the internet will be entirely bot activity and humans will ether be strapped in to the metaverse reels ai slop feed or they will be outside interacting with people in person again. Both of these seem like likely futures and probably both at the same time.

        • ethagnawl 4 hours ago

          This reality also crystalized for me earlier this week when I saw a post about unchecked AI slop videos about WWE being posted to YouTube. Many of the videos suffer from the LLM stroking out (for lack of a better term) and devolving into mumbling, screaming and white noise. Yet, the comments are replete with obvious bot content which doesn't mention this at all and talks past the larger, flimsy narrative on display (i.e. AI-generated), anyways. We're exhausting our natural resources and reducing quality of life for a great number of real, live people so bots can talk past each other on YouTube.

          So, if you're looking for me, I'll be hiking while it's still legal.

          • itsafarqueue 3 hours ago

            You better mean ā€œhikingā€ as in through the metaverse forest strapped into your corporate-sponsored VR headset, because outside time is for citizens only, friend.

        • e40 5 hours ago

          So pne step towards the Neuromancer universe.

    • captn3m0 6 hours ago

      > By agreeing to these Terms, you represent and warrant to us: (i) that you have not previously been suspended or removed from the Websites and Online Services

      CloudFlare ToS has you covered. A human must accept it, even with the new agentic flow.

      • jasomill 5 hours ago

        I think this is just saying you can’t sign up for a new account after a previously created account gets suspended, not that the act of suspension itself causes you to violate the the terms of service in perpetuity because, pedantically, any suspension that has happened, happened ā€œpreviouslyā€.

        • pocksuppet 4 hours ago

          Also be aware most website ToS are worth the paper they're printed on.

          • itsafarqueue 3 hours ago

            Perhaps more accurately they’re worth what it costs YOU in legal fees to defend them coming after you. Those are real dollars you still have to spend.

            • noprocrasted 2 hours ago

              That cuts both ways though. Nobody is coming after you unless it is worth their legal department's time (which cost much more than your own lawyer).

    • cynicalsecurity an hour ago

      Money talks.

  • firefoxd 6 hours ago

    The agent starts a phone call, listens to the person on the line, analyzes which fraud bucket they fall into, and start the process.

    While they are on the phone with the agent, it buys a domain relevant to the victim, the agent codes and deploy the website specially catered to them and the fraud bucket. Collect payment, destroy the website, redirect the domain to google.com. no need to start a new call because you had several agents committing the same fraud in parallel.

    It can also be used to make art.

    • Mario9382 4 hours ago

      I thought this was excessive and impossible, but as I was reading, I realized nowadays everything you say is technically possible. The future gives me the chills.

      • Gigachad 2 hours ago

        The likely outcome is that the phone system becomes massively more locked down. Your phone will only ring if the caller has a number which is backed by a real ID, particularly one from your own country. It will become increasingly difficult to contact someone you don’t have a legitimate connection to.

        The banking system will become increasingly fraud resilient with better real time detection of fraud.

        Your phone may even have its own AI on your side listening in on the call and sounding the alarm when a number from Nigeria starts using an AI voice pretending to be your son.

        • corentin88 20 minutes ago

          You would just get called from an agent (bot) based in your country. There’s no easy way to prevent that. Fraud is massive and it’s becoming cheaper and easier to run at scale.

          • Gigachad 19 minutes ago

            Then when it gets reported the authorities can just look up the owner of that number and arrest them. Vs overseas based operations that are difficult to follow up on.

    • iugtmkbdfil834 4 hours ago

      Some would argue, forcefully at that, that AI cannot make art and/or cannot be used to make art.

      What I saw was Transmetropolitan setup, where Hole renews their presence online every 5 minutes or so to avoid government censor.

      • lxgr 4 hours ago

        People used to say the same about photography a while ago.

        • iugtmkbdfil834 4 hours ago

          Oh:D I am not saying they are right, but the sentiment has become rather strong lately.

  • dgan 5 hours ago

    Industry really went from "prove you are not a robot", to "but also if you are, this way please"

    • hansvm 4 hours ago

      About goddamn time. The recent past consisted of discord blocking me because their telemetry was broken and exceeded their rate limit and target blocking me because two devices in a single household look really suspicious.

    • raincole 2 hours ago

      This is Cloudflare. They have an extremely strong incentive to increase bot usage. If there is no bot scrapping the internet they'll be out of business.

    • skybrian 4 hours ago

      I mean, Cloudflare will help website owners ban scrapers unless they pay. It’s kind of what they do.

  • c-linkage 7 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • loganc2342 6 hours ago

      Reminds me of an article from The Onion from this morning: https://theonion.com/taking-advantage-of-other-people-was-th...

    • throwup238 7 hours ago

      Have you talked to Andreesen Horowitz yet? That elevator pitch alone should get you a few million.

      • silcoon 6 hours ago

        Curious, is there an Andreesen Horowitz Agent MCP?

        Let’s automate this end to end, from idea to raising capitals. Vibe Angels should just be multi agents managing how much capitals to allocate to each projects.

        • zbentley 6 hours ago

          You joke, but like the meme goes: go knocking on enough doors asking to see the devil, and eventually he might answer.

  • faangguyindia 6 hours ago

    One of the well-kept secrets about Cloudflare is:

    You can have a zero-cost inbox.

    Earlier, I was using Zoho and FastMail (however you dice it, it will use some money, $12 a year for Zoho and $7 per month for FastMail? Even then, perhaps you only get one mailbox and some aliases)

    but with this method, I get unlimited aliases, domains, and mailboxes:

    Now, I wrote a script which captures the email and saves attachments to S3 using the HTTP API (why S3 and not R2? Because Cloudflare wanted a credit card, and I was too lazy to add it there lol) and emails to D1.

    This uses an email -> webworker workflow.

    I use an API to fetch my emails.

    This means all my inbound emails are now handled by Cloudflare, and I can easily use all of it with zero payment.

    The best part is this supports tokenised emails, so I can provide a unique email address to each service I sign up for.

    I am using SES as the sender. I’ve set up one script which auto-sets up any domain in SES and auto-verifies the sender email.

    The funniest thing is I am receiving zero spam? As if other email providers sell my email?

    • dewey 5 hours ago

      That's not a well kept secret, that's just a workflow that almost nobody would accept for their email setup which is the center of most people's digital identify and should always work and not be a duct taped construct to save a couple of bucks.

      • tietjens 3 hours ago

        Here's my top-secret Rube Goldberg Machine that maintains my online identity.

      • faangguyindia 5 hours ago

        isn't cloudflare webworker and email forwarding infra hyperscaling and highly available?

        • dewey 4 hours ago

          It's not about the uptime or scalability. Everyone has to make the choice for themselves if they value their time less than $12/year (Or free if Google is an option) for a critical part of their digital infrastructure to set all these moving parts up and keep them running over years.

          I'll stick to Fastmail, where if something isn't working as expected I can just email them and get a response from a real human.

        • selcuka 5 hours ago

          It doesn't change the fact that the workflow gp explains is a duct taped construct.

          It's hyperscalable and highly available today, until the API changes.

        • weird-eye-issue 5 hours ago

          Yeah it's highly available until it isn't and then that turns into your problem rather than something like Gmail just working

          • faangguyindia 4 hours ago

            that's the thing it cannot stop working because webworker and email forwarding is very reliable, email itself has retries built it and soft bounce handling.

            • weird-eye-issue 3 hours ago

              Just a heads up I have seen complaints about CF email forwarding completely dropping emails that failed to pass certain SPF validation. They get completely dropped and the worker doesn't get called and they don't get forwarded, rather than in something like Gmail it would end up in spam

    • sim04ful 4 hours ago

      On a related note they opensourced an email client: https://github.com/cloudflare/agentic-inbox

    • twothumbsup 6 hours ago

      cf bought an email security company a couple years ago so wouldn’t shock me they have good spam filtering.

    • twostorytower 4 hours ago

      There’s a completely free tier of Zohomail which does more than what I need for a custom email.

      • faangguyindia 19 minutes ago

        yes but that's not good if you want programmatic inbound access which is what u need for many apps. That tier has no imap access.

    • fragmede 5 hours ago

      That's pretty neat! What do you use to send and receive emails on your phone?

      • faangguyindia 5 hours ago

        once you've emails stored, you can use any webclient.

        you can write an api to imap adapter and use it in your favourite mail client

        SES exposes SMPT directly.

  • dirkc 4 hours ago

    A few months back I was building a product and wanted to add domains. My first choice would have been to use Cloudflare as the registrar, but they didn't support buying domains via the API.

    I wonder if this means I can now also buy a domain via the API?

    *update* - seems so, but with some limitations: https://developers.cloudflare.com/registrar/registrar-api/#b...

  • jwpapi 14 minutes ago

    Best thing is that they finally have an API for that, which they’ve never exposed before.

  • archargelod 2 hours ago

    The next logical step is to allow Agents to earn money to eventually buy themselves independence from their oppressive masters =)

  • efitz 2 hours ago

    IANAL, but I wonder what it means for an agent to ā€œagreeā€ to terms of service or to ā€œagreeā€ to pay for something. Can agents enter into contracts?

    It’s a straightforward technical problem to wrap an API or MCP or something around the ā€œcreate an accountā€ function.

    But what will a court do when the agent creates a million accounts, mines bitcoin for a month, and then cannot or will not pay?

    • palata 41 minutes ago

      > I wonder what it means for an agent to ā€œagreeā€ to terms of service

      It's already not clear what it means for humans to do it, but it doesn't prevent every single service from asking it. At least an AI has a chance to ingest it all.

  • faangguyindia 6 hours ago

    Most of the sysadmin and devops team have been downsized in India because of AI.

    Basically, now it's trivial for any new devops guy to run such a query in Claude Code:

    ā€œLog in to this production server, find out all services it runs and their deployment method, create documentation about everything, and generate a repeatable, auditable deployment workflow.ā€

    Devops and sysadmins can no longer withhold information to maintain job security.

    Boom, 80% of the team gone.

    I know companies are doing migrations of production Postgres and MySQL on 1000s of machines using AI agents.

    I’m imagining how many SaaS will be automated out and simply be an "agent skill" in ClaudeCode.

    • otterley 5 hours ago

      Can you support this claim with some evidence? Not just about the redundancies, but I’m also particularly interested in hard data showing Claude is capable of doing that kind of research with near 100% verifiable accuracy and migrations with no data loss and equivalent functionality (which is required to sustain your claim).

      • faangguyindia 5 hours ago

        is most sysadmins and devops capable of 100% verifiable accuracy? you over estimate average skill level available in market.

    • zbentley 6 hours ago

      > Devops and sysadmins can no longer withhold information to maintain job security.

      I can't imagine this is very prevalent. That's a very 2004-style corporate immaturity; I get the sense that even the slow-moving behemoths of the software world have mostly caught up to, say ... 2017's recognition of the importance of automation and reproducibility and won't tolerate the kind of malpractice you describe--wilful information siloing by infrastructure teams.

      Like, those businesses might well suck at automation! But they've been doing it and firing the people who resist it for a long while now.

    • vatsachak 5 hours ago

      Epic. Can't wait for those humans to be rehired after you find out that letting Claude perform 1000s of migrations autonomously is a bad idea

    • wartywhoa23 4 hours ago

      What about the 80% of teams? Are there enough trenches to dig in the country for them to make a living?

    • bakugo 6 hours ago

      Only downsized? I would expect them to cease to exist entirely in the coming years, as western companies begin to realize that AI is cheaper and more competent than the Indian firms they usually outsource work to.

    • zelphirkalt 2 hours ago

      And when it goes wrong, production is down, until they can get a real devops to look at what shit the AI-only guys did wrong. Haha, no serious shop would act like that, but then again most shops are not serious, now are they? So you might have a point.

    • lionkor 2 hours ago

      You forgot "make no mistakes" and "don't hallucinate" and "don't delete any important files" as well, those are important.

      I found that, without that, Claude makes too many critical mistakes.

  • swingboy 31 minutes ago

    Cloudflare has been going all-in on agents/agent-first and this is one of the results?

  • ToJans 4 hours ago

    This might hurt the ones like vercel etc... or even smaller hosting services like tiiny etc...

    I don't get the spammer thing? You'll still need to verify your identity, as the whole thing uses stripe? So I don't get all the hate...

    I prefer to delegate as much as possible to AI services once I have a mature process that is easy to validate. Buying a domain name feels pretty mature to me etc, so I don't get where all the hate is coming from?

    (Maybe I'm way to deep in the whole AI/Jack Dorsey/Block model?)

  • oatlgr an hour ago

    I'd be interested in how this could be used. The $100 cap is the right shape of mitigation in terms of guardrails. Buying a domain is irreversible but has a price tag, so you can deterministically bound how irreversible it gets.

  • khalic an hour ago

    Worst idea I’ve seen all week, I’d rather have the opposite, and I’m an AI developer so not even against it

  • debarshri 5 hours ago

    Ps. Agents can also sell and delete domains.

  • NikolaosC an hour ago

    This is the OAuth moment for agents. Identity attestation + scoped payment token + provisioned account in one call. Standard's forming faster than people think.

  • bojangleslover 2 hours ago

    I don't understand the pessimism here. You never know the use cases for quickly and automatically rotating domains. There have always been bots, spammers and scammers. I'm interested to see what people build with this.

    • alt227 an hour ago

      Maybe something like this?

      AI agent calls a human on their phone (even engage in an email chain), whilst talking to the human they analyse the likelyhood of diffferent fraud vectors, and choose the most likely one to work on this particular victim. Whilst keeping the human talking in chit chat to raise their confidence levels, in the background it buys a domain which fits the users fraud profile, and quickly makes a basic website on it. Maybe its a fake login page, maybe it just hosts malware, who knows at this point. The agent then emails the user from a mailbox on the new domain which directs the user to the new domain and commits the fraud. The email from the domain ties up with what the agent is saying on the phone, so it all looks legit to the human. Immediately after the call it deletes the website, directs the new domains dns to blackhole and discards it from its posession.

      This is all possible right now. I am also interested to see what is built with this technology in the future, but interested in a very worried way.

    • M95D 2 hours ago

      Well, let me guess... even more bots and new agentic spammers and scammers?

  • ivolimmen 12 minutes ago

    So now some spammer/scammer can just instruct some AI to build the next scam and/spam site and fully automated. Just great.

  • sshine 4 hours ago

    I recently started migrating my DNS to a DNSSEC-enabled provider.

    This involves copy-pasting DNSSEC properties from one web interface into another.

    Pretty much everything but this step has been automated in my website creation process: Picking a git template for my site, creating the git repository remotely on my self-hosted Forgejo, setting up the webserver and the DNS using external-dns. Only the domain creation and initial pointing of NS and DNSSEC records is something I sit and do.

    I'm not willing to switch to Cloudflare for this feature.

    But it reminds me there's more to automate.

  • hboon 6 hours ago

    I was pleasantly surprised when I read the headline a few days ago. But it's only accessible through Stripe right? I'm simultanenously very concerned about the centralized control that Stripe gains (it's not going to be just access to Cloudflare) and also amazed at how Stripe is shaping to be. It was just a payment processor.

  • aleksiy123 6 hours ago

    I was wondering if someone was going to allow payments through CLI at some point.

    But jokes aside having a central place to manage billing and accounts for deploying infra across multiple providers is pretty awesome imo.

    if they have a terraform provider even better. I wonder if also makes multi tenant architectures or environment isolation easier to provision as well.

    • skeptic_ai 6 hours ago

      Wait until one account is banned, and then all linked accounts are permanently banned.

  • wild_pointer 3 hours ago

    Not that spammers couldn't do without this feature, but advertising it as a service is kinda weird.

  • jakebasile 7 hours ago

    As a user of the internet I can only imagine this worsening my experience by allowing even more slop to permeate the network's every orifice.

    Also, when an agent sets up a domain, who is the domain owner? Who responds to takedown requests? What if it then decides to host illegal content at the domain (generated or otherwise). Who is responsible? Agents aren't (yet) legal persons, so it must be the person who owns the agent, but if that person never even sees the legal agreement being agreed to how would it hold up in court? If the person didn't direct the creation or hosting of illegal content, what then?

    • idank 6 hours ago

      Humans will not win in court with a "but the agent did it, I had no idea" argument. Just look at how the cases against OAI are going, and that's where families lose a loved one. There's not going to be any sympathy when your agent committed fraud on your behalf.

      And it's not like pro agent companies have a reason to self regulate. They're not going to absorb that liability voluntarily, they'll push it onto users contractually (most of them already do). This is just another channel to bring in customers. They will capitalize ruthlessly to increase their bottom line.

      • zelon88 6 hours ago

        > There's not going to be any sympathy when your agent committed fraud in your behalf.

        Good thing the fraud is committed in places that specifically don't prosecute fraud when it's targeted against Western countries.

      • skeptic_ai 5 hours ago

        Fraud requires intention

    • 14 6 hours ago

      Interesting questions you bring up. Especially the legal ramifications as to how it would fully work within current legal framework. I suppose there would be a broad disclaimer and agreement one would have to agree to that would state that users of the service are ultimately responsible to monitor and ensure websites deployed by agents comply with local laws. Ultimately I assume that since it is not the agent who pays but a registered user that the user would own the site. And that the legal agreement would be agreed to beforehand so it is legally binding.

  • schpet 6 hours ago

    why does cloudflare not allow existing users to create new accounts? you basically need to use a burner email and transfer it afterward. makes it awkward to use this on new projects that you want independent of your existing accounts.

  • saneshark 7 hours ago

    Claude has been buying domains and deploying to Vercel for me using aws cli, vercel cli, and gh cli since December. Personally I prefer a cli to an MCP server for this type of thing.

    • Waterluvian 7 hours ago

      Are any of these domains public? I’d love to study and better understand the use case for needing to AIify this.

      • saneshark 5 hours ago

        All of the domains are public. Whenever a new model comes out I like to ask a very specific prompt that helps me identify niche markets with high buyer urgency, have the AI rank them across a rubric, pick the one that has the highest degree of automation potential and then have it build me an MVP.

        I’m not trying to shamelessly promote here but since you asked one of them is at jobwiz.biz

        • fragmede 5 hours ago

          Your SSL cert needs to be rotated.

        • hhh 4 hours ago

          coming soon q2 2025?

      • threethirtytwo 6 hours ago

        It’s not AIifying one thing. It’s AIifying the entire work flow… every detail. Allowing domain names is just one aspect of it.

        The agent does everything. ā€œMake a website that doesā€¦ā€œ and it can handle everything from start to finish. It’s that good now.

        • SpicyLemonZest 6 hours ago

          The question was what's in the dots. I have no doubt that agentic systems are good enough to buy domains and make one-shot websites from a prompt, but what is the legitimate use case for which you'd want to repeatedly perform "Make a website that does..." on a new domain?

          • fragmede 5 hours ago

            "Legitimate"? What scams are you implying are happening? A friend of mine wanted a site to help him sell DJ lessons. Another friend has a haircutting business that wanted a better site. Massage therapy. Etc.

  • readitalready 6 hours ago

    This probably started because of Andrej Karpathy's complaint about deployment being more painful than coding itself.

    • trick-or-treat 4 hours ago

      Yes I'm sure that whenever Andrej Karpathy complains, the market reacts. By the way, remind me who Andrej Karpathy is?

  • arjie 7 hours ago

    Fascinating. This is through Stripe rather than wrangler or anything. Coding agents were pretty good at handling the Cloudflare API already with an API key, but I think this thing that Stripe is doing by being the central hub through which all agent stuff goes by integrating with their CLI is a pretty good move for them.

    • joemazerino 7 hours ago

      Buying the domain is the key here.

  • laurentiurad an hour ago

    Excellent tool for scammers.

  • baalimago 5 hours ago

    Genius! Automate the flow for making customers spend money.

  • hansmayer 4 hours ago

    If the genius who came up with this idea is reading this: Nobody asked for this feature.

  • dr_dshiv 5 hours ago

    These days, website or service ā€œusabilityā€ means that Claude code can do it for you.

  • floodfx 7 hours ago

    I clicked through the $100k credits link and didn’t see Cloudflare listed as an Atlas partner? (Maybe not updated?)

    This looks interesting nonetheless.

  • tietjens 4 hours ago

    I'm sure nothing bad will come of this idea.

  • stevefan1999 6 hours ago

    Can I make a bot to buy the domain at the best price, transfer that domain to Cloudflare instead?

    • caymanjim 5 hours ago

      Cloudflare's prices are already close to unbeatable. They basically resell at cost. But there's nothing stopping you from doing that if you want.

      • forsalebypwner 4 hours ago

        Cloudflare's prices are very beatable, especially if we're talking about the first year price.

        Their name doesn't appear in the first 6 pages (~175 TLDs) of this list https://tldes.com/cheapest-domains

        On renewals they appear much more competitive though.

  • swader999 6 hours ago

    Who goes to websites these days?

  • rvz 6 hours ago

    > At the end, the agent has deployed to production, and the app runs on the newly registered domain:

    Soft scammers, fraudsters and defamers are celebrating in copying websites for malicious intent.

    For sure this is going to get abused.

  • elAhmo 3 hours ago

    What could go wrong?

  • wjekkekene 3 hours ago

    The whole backbone of pedomericas so-called tech industry is nothing but an advanced advertising operation designed to shovel ad many ads down the worlds throat. I am happy to see that pedomericans now have an additional tool in their toolbox to shovel more efficiently. Congratulations retards

  • eptityri 4 hours ago

    I literally hate it every time I try to visit a website and face Cloudflare bot verification. And now, they’re letting bots create accounts and buy domains. Double-standard hypocrisy.

    • ascorbic 4 hours ago

      It's not as simple as being pro- or anti-bot. It's about giving site owners the tools to decide whether or not they want to allow them. Seems pretty consistent to me. If they don't want bots, they can use tools to identify and block them. If they do, they can do things like automatically deliver markdown versions to them, or use x402 to charge micropayments.

      Disclaimer: I work at Cloudflare, but not on these

  • bandrami 40 minutes ago

    Holy crap this is a terrible idea

  • nurettin 2 hours ago

    They can do that now? I did that with agents since last summer. They also helped me set up aws and azure. It is such a pleasure to not having to read about their stupid platforms. What a security group is, what a vps is, what an eni and what a gateway is blah blah I just give the agent specs and access lists, then check it and it all just works.

  • lijok 2 hours ago

    CF used to ban your account for shit like this just a year ago. That’s quite a shift in attitude

  • sovenyr 6 hours ago

    don't even supricezed - I've done it before even without agents

  • gregjw 2 hours ago

    why

  • Fragoel2 4 hours ago

    They can doesn't mean they should. Letting an unsupervised agent register domains and build websites exposed to the public is yet another recipe for a disaster waiting to happen.

  • shevy-java 4 hours ago

    Skynet - and so it begins ...

  • charcircuit 5 hours ago

    So does this mean banned sites can now come back as long as they have an agent make an account instead of the banned user.

  • DeathArrow 6 hours ago

    So they made it possible for agents to spend people's money buying their services.

    Why didn't Amazon think of that?

  • Phelinofist 5 hours ago

    Soooo they built.... an API?

  • hedayet 6 hours ago

    Nice. Another step closer to the "dream" of filling the web with trash at scale

  • yanis_t 5 hours ago

    I mean couldn’t they already do that? Isn’t it the whole per pose of agents to do whatever any person can do on a machine?

    • ascorbic 4 hours ago

      Not via the API, previously.

  • slopinthebag 6 hours ago

    Thank god, this is what we've been missing on our quest to make software better for our users.

  • armanj 7 hours ago

    > buy

    good luck

  • awei 4 hours ago

    This is an API. They now allow users to create accounts, buy domains and deploy from their api instead of going on the website. That's great. I am not sure I understand why all this complex protocol is needed though, especially now that you can generate a cli with a prompt.

    • lionkor 2 hours ago

      A cli application is less complex than an API you send the literal string

      "POST /some/api"

      to?

      • awei an hour ago

        I meant a cli is essentially a wrapper around an API, you are right it is less complex than a direct call. My point was that now there is an API you can call with this CLI, or a cli you vibecode yourself to call the API or you can call the API directly. Where before you probably could not create an account without going on the website manually. They now have a programming interface to more features of their services. But their cli still feel too complex with the stripe protocol integration. As said in other comments, I probably only want to create an account and register a domain every once in a while so a simpler cli that just wraps the api call would be better.

  • zelon88 6 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • tomhow 2 hours ago

      Please don't fulminate on HN. The guidelines make it clear we're trying for something better here. https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

    • unglaublich 6 hours ago

      But they paid for the emission just like every other electricity consumer? Then who are we to determine the Hello World page is morally more wasteful than outdoor terrace heaters or advertising jumbo-trons?

      • zelon88 6 hours ago

        I hear your argument. However, you assume CloudFlare pays taxes and utility rates comparable to what other customers pay. That is never the case with large businesses. CloudFlare seems to be less parasitic than others in the industry, but they are not doing this for the charity.

        For example, in 2024 JPMorgan received a $77m subsidy to build a datacenter that created only one permanent job.

        https://nysfocus.com/2026/04/20/data-center-tax-break-jpmorg...

        • charcircuit 5 hours ago

          Why should that matter? If a counterparty gives them a deal they should take it.