Yesterday, a major AWS outage brought the world to a standstill. But why did it happen? And will it ever happen again?
AWS outage has taken down millions of websites, including Amazon.com, Prime Video, Perplexity AI, Canva and more.
DynamoDB error rates in the US-EAST-1 region soared shortly after midnight Pacific Time, rippling through other AWS services ...
At about 4:30PM ET on October 20, things seemed to be returning back to normal. Apps like Venmo and Lyft, which were either ...
Disruptions lasted upward of two hours for most services, though some users—mostly in the United States—continued to see ...
Amazon Web Services experienced DNS resolution issues on Monday morning, taking down wide swaths of the web—and highlighting ...
A status page for Amazon's cloud unit showed more than 80 of its services and features were affected early Monday.
In making sense of all the hullabaloo, cybersecurity expert David Kennedy just dropped a curt and pertinent take on the AWS ...
Amazon Web Services are down globally. According to Downdetector – the website performance tracking website, over 15,000 ...
Amazon.com cloud service returned to normal operations on Monday afternoon, the company said, after an internet outage that ...
The service provides cloud-computing and API services to major websites, popular apps, and platforms across the world. It ...
AWS stated at 5:20 am ET that it had applied initial mitigations and was observing signs of recovery, adding moments later, ...