1) Blind people are not "blocked from the internet". This is an accessibility issue with one of their security products. It's no different than an employer using other security measures that might limit usage for certain people, but it's the employer who makes the ultimate decision.
2) The reason people keep using Cloudflare is because it has the best product suite and pricing. There are competitors but none have approached the same features or (ironically) accessibility as CF.
3) Mission statements are nothing more than politics and PR. People put entirely too much faith in corporations and their associated mottos as if they're divine principles to live by. It's up to users to make their own rational decisions by weighing the risks, and in that regard, Cloudflare has actively helped fight censorship by helping improving connectivity and access to software, information, and privacy.
But they can. They just can't read the information because the software is not fully compatible yet. What if the screenreader software didn't exist or wasn't working? Are you going to make the same complaint?
> "People use cloudflare not because it is the best product"
Care to share some evidence? Are you just assuming you know better than everyone? The company didn't reach $35B market cap because of a free tier (which is also considered part of the product by the way).
> "says their PR is very effective."
Actually, I said PR should be ignored and you should instead look at their actions, which do back up what I claim.
It sounds like you're completely unfamiliar with the company and instead have some irrational vendetta against them. Not sure why, but it certainly doesn't lead to any productive discussion. Let's end it here.
2) The reason people keep using Cloudflare is because it has the best product suite and pricing. There are competitors but none have approached the same features or (ironically) accessibility as CF.
3) Mission statements are nothing more than politics and PR. People put entirely too much faith in corporations and their associated mottos as if they're divine principles to live by. It's up to users to make their own rational decisions by weighing the risks, and in that regard, Cloudflare has actively helped fight censorship by helping improving connectivity and access to software, information, and privacy.