An Amazon Web Services outage has been causing major disruptions around the world. The service provides remote computing services to many apps, websites, governments, universities and companies.

On Downdetector, a website that tracks online outages, users reported issues with Amazon Alexa, Amazon Prime, Snapchat, Ring, Roblox, Fortnite, online broker Robinhood, the McDonald’s app and many others.

  • TheFogan@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    That’s why real web companies go multi cloud. Letting us divide up our dependency among the big 3 companies everyone hates (Google, Amazon and Microsoft).

      • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        Yup.

        “Oh hey, we have a partial outage right now due to AWS. Most of the site still works, but users can’t log in, because that is handled on AWS… Which means users can’t access the “most of the site” that still works… But at least we can say we weren’t completely down during the outage.”

      • ramble81@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        every time any cloud provider goes down

        Um, you’re not doing it right if that’s the case. Multi-cloud redundancy reduces downtime, it doesn’t increase downtime unless you’re doing something stupid like dividing up your SPOFs

        • CucumberFetish@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          Yes, if everything is configured correctly, then an outage can be either avoided completely or reduced to the time it takes to switch the traffic over (and scale up and so on). But this is not the case as can be seen from today’s events.

          • TheFogan@programming.dev
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            19 hours ago

            Well guess it depends which companies we are talking about, and which if any have multi cloud redundancy… and if they are configured correctly. Obviously if someone has a multi cloud environment, configured perfectly to be unaffected, we just wouldn’t know what they have in the cloud, because the lack of outage wouldn’t generate any news.