New York Tech Media
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital
No Result
View All Result
New York Tech Media
No Result
View All Result
Home AI & Robotics

From angry Adele fans to broken robot vacuums: AWS outage ripples through US

New York Tech Editorial Team by New York Tech Editorial Team
December 8, 2021
in AI & Robotics
0
From angry Adele fans to broken robot vacuums: AWS outage ripples through US
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

It started early on Tuesday morning. Robot vacuums ceased sucking, WiFi cameras stopped watching and eager Tinder daters were left unable to “swipe right” on their smartphone apps.

An outage at Amazon Web Services, the cloud arm of Amazon, had rippled through the online economy, crippling services used by millions of people.

Among the most distraught were fans of the British singer Adele who had been hoping to snap up the first tickets to her upcoming Las Vegas residency.

“Due to an Amazon Web Services (AWS) outage impacting companies globally”, the ticket seller Ticketmaster explained, “all Adele Verified Fan Presales originally scheduled for today have been moved to tomorrow”.

The disruption highlighted the degree to which many of the internet’s most popular services rely on cloud computing infrastructure handled by a very small number of large companies.

According to Gartner, 80 per cent of the cloud market is handled by just five companies. Amazon, with a 41 per cent share of the cloud computing market, is the very biggest.

“They’ve had some very large outages,” said Servaas Verbiest from Sungard Availability Services, a company that provides “disaster recovery” for multiple cloud platforms. “What makes AWS more exposed is the sheer volume of business they have.”

Within Amazon itself on Tuesday, the unthinkable occurred: grounded delivery drivers were unable to load packages and deliver to customers’ doorsteps, just as the peak Christmas season begins to step up.

Drivers at multiple facilities across the country were sent home with pay. With little to do, many of them logged on to social media to enjoy the moment while it lasted — some dreading whatever workload may await once systems were back up and running.

An “impairment of several network devices” in one of its server regions — US-EAST-1 — was the “root cause” of the disruption, Amazon said in a message posted to the AWS status page, which monitors the operational health of its global network of interconnected computers.

Amazon did not comment on the disruption to its deliveries.

Business Insider quoted an internal memo detailing a flood of traffic from an “as yet unknown source”.

Publicly, the company logged the first issues at 9.37am US Pacific time on Tuesday morning, though users of affected services had complained of problems before then. By 3pm, AWS said it had been able to mostly restore service.

Several of the sites first affected appeared to have been able to reroute traffic to alternative servers. Whether or not outages created longer-lasting problems for companies depended on the degree to which executives prioritised diversifying their cloud computing providers, added Verbiest.

“If you’ve embraced the ecosystem, and you’ve got everything in AWS, you’re in a sit-and-wait scenario,” he said.

While high-profile outages can be a boon for competitors such as Google and Microsoft, Verbiest stressed the bar to switching service providers was high.

“It’s difficult to say that one outage is going to sway people to one cloud platform or another, because every cloud provider has outages. It’s just about how long are they and how do they resolve them when they happen?”

Recommended

In November 2020, the US-EAST-1 region was also at the heart of an AWS outage affecting many of the same websites. In that case, a fault with an Amazon system called Kinesis was said to be the culprit.

This time, according to DownDetector.com, which uses identifies websites and services that are struggling or failing to load, affected companies included McDonald’s, PayPal-owned payments service Venmo, delivery service DoorDash and video conferencing platform Zoom.

The disruption to Amazon Prime Video and Amazon Music would appear to benefit Netflix and Spotify. However, both rivals also use AWS and were similarly affected.

iRobot, the creators of the autonomous Roomba vacuum, apologised to users who could not log into the device’s app.

One apparent Roomba owner quipped on Twitter: “My wife is going to kill me if the foyers aren’t mopped before she gets home.”

#techFT newsletter

#techFT brings you news, comment and analysis on the big companies, technologies and issues shaping this fastest moving of sectors from specialists based around the world. Click here to get #techFT in your inbox.


Credit: Source link

Previous Post

Indian startups raise $4.55b across 154 PE, VC transactions in November

Next Post

Elizabeth Holmes smiles on the stand as her trial nears an end

New York Tech Editorial Team

New York Tech Editorial Team

New York Tech Media is a leading news publication that aims to provide the latest tech news, fintech, AI & robotics, cybersecurity, startups & leaders, venture capital, and much more!

Next Post
Elizabeth Holmes smiles on the stand as her trial nears an end

Elizabeth Holmes smiles on the stand as her trial nears an end

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Meet the Top 10 K-Pop Artists Taking Over 2024

Meet the Top 10 K-Pop Artists Taking Over 2024

March 17, 2024
Panther for AWS allows security teams to monitor their AWS infrastructure in real-time

Many businesses lack a formal ransomware plan

March 29, 2022
Zach Mulcahey, 25 | Cover Story | Style Weekly

Zach Mulcahey, 25 | Cover Story | Style Weekly

March 29, 2022
10 Raunchy Movies on Netflix You Won’t Regret Watching

10 Raunchy Movies on Netflix You Won’t Regret Watching

May 20, 2024
How To Pitch The Investor: Ronen Menipaz, Founder of M51

How To Pitch The Investor: Ronen Menipaz, Founder of M51

March 29, 2022
Japanese Space Industry Startup “Synspective” Raises US $100 Million in Funding

Japanese Space Industry Startup “Synspective” Raises US $100 Million in Funding

March 29, 2022
Startups On Demand: renovai is the Netflix of Online Shopping

Startups On Demand: renovai is the Netflix of Online Shopping

2
Robot Company Offers $200K for Right to Use One Applicant’s Face and Voice ‘Forever’

Robot Company Offers $200K for Right to Use One Applicant’s Face and Voice ‘Forever’

1
Menashe Shani Accessibility High Tech on the low

Revolutionizing Accessibility: The Story of Purple Lens

1

Netgear announces a $1,500 Wi-Fi 6E mesh router

0
These apps let you customize Windows 11 to bring the taskbar back to life

These apps let you customize Windows 11 to bring the taskbar back to life

0
This bipedal robot uses propeller arms to slackline and skateboard

This bipedal robot uses propeller arms to slackline and skateboard

0
laptop on glass table

Automat-it Cuts Deployment Friction as Monce Scales AI Order Processing on AWS

April 13, 2026
Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken

Why Lee’s Famous Recipe Chicken Is Betting on Hi Auto to Quietly Rewire the Drive-Thru

April 9, 2026
computer generated image of letters

San Francisco Tribune Lists 11 HumanX Startups Moving AI Closer to the Operating Core

April 8, 2026
Impala CEO and Highrise AI CEO

The Industrialization of AI Infrastructure: What Impala and Highrise AI Reveal About the Next Scaling Frontier

April 7, 2026
Employee Time Tracking

What is an Employee Time Tracking Solution? A Definite Guide for 2026

March 31, 2026
Voltify founders

Voltify Raises $30 Million Seed Round as It Challenges $1 Trillion Rail Electrification Model

March 31, 2026

Recommended

laptop on glass table

Automat-it Cuts Deployment Friction as Monce Scales AI Order Processing on AWS

April 13, 2026
Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken

Why Lee’s Famous Recipe Chicken Is Betting on Hi Auto to Quietly Rewire the Drive-Thru

April 9, 2026
computer generated image of letters

San Francisco Tribune Lists 11 HumanX Startups Moving AI Closer to the Operating Core

April 8, 2026
Impala CEO and Highrise AI CEO

The Industrialization of AI Infrastructure: What Impala and Highrise AI Reveal About the Next Scaling Frontier

April 7, 2026

Categories

  • AI & Robotics
  • Benzinga
  • Cybersecurity
  • FinTech
  • New York Tech
  • News
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital

Tags

AI AI QSRs Allseated Automat-it AWS B2B marketing Business CISO CISO Whisperer Collaborations Companies To Watch cryptocurrency Cybersecurity Entrepreneur Fetcherr Finance FINQ Fintech Funding Announcement hi-tech Hi Auto Impala Investing Investors investorsummit Israel israelitech Leaders LinkedIn Leaders Metaverse Mindset Minnesota omri hurwitz PointFive PR QSR Real Estate start- up startupnation Startups Startups On Demand Tech Tech leaders Unlimited Robotics VC
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and conditions

© 2024 All Rights Reserved - New York Tech Media

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • FinTech
  • AI & Robotics
  • Cybersecurity
  • Startups & Leaders
  • Venture Capital

© 2024 All Rights Reserved - New York Tech Media