Amazon Announces Update Following Massive Outage Across Numerous Platforms
Share and Follow


Amazon revealed late Monday that it had successfully resolved connectivity issues that had disrupted numerous platforms reliant on its Amazon Web Services, or AWS, which had led to widespread chaos for most of the day.

In an evening announcement, Amazon’s cloud computing division confirmed that the extensive website outages, which began shortly after midnight Pacific Time, were fully addressed, and all services had been restored to normal functionality.

SEE ALSO: Discover the Astonishing and Potentially Alarming AI Video Technology Released by Google


MORE: Bold or Reckless? Google’s Venture into Fusion Power

According to the notice on their website:


The statement on the website read:

Oct 20 3:53 PM PDT Between 11:49 PM PDT on October 19 and 2:24 AM PDT on October 20, we experienced increased error rates and latencies for AWS Services in the US-EAST-1 Region. Additionally, services or features that rely on US-EAST-1 endpoints such as IAM and DynamoDB Global Tables also experienced issues during this time. At 12:26 AM on October 20, we identified the trigger of the event as DNS resolution issues for the regional DynamoDB service endpoints. After resolving the DynamoDB DNS issue at 2:24 AM, services began recovering but we had a subsequent impairment in the internal subsystem of EC2 that is responsible for launching EC2 instances due to its dependency on DynamoDB. 

As we continued to work through EC2 instance launch impairments, Network Load Balancer health checks also became impaired, resulting in network connectivity issues in multiple services such as Lambda, DynamoDB, and CloudWatch. We recovered the Network Load Balancer health checks at 9:38 AM. As part of the recovery effort, we temporarily throttled some operations such as EC2 instance launches, processing of SQS queues via Lambda Event Source Mappings, and asynchronous Lambda invocations. 

Over time we reduced throttling of operations and worked in parallel to resolve network connectivity issues until the services fully recovered. By 3:01 PM, all AWS services returned to normal operations. Some services, such as AWS Config, Redshift, and Connect, continue to have a backlog of messages that they will finish processing over the next few hours. We will share a detailed AWS post-event summary.





In short, if you were having trouble using Amazon, Ring, Zoom, Snapchat, Canva, Venmo, T-Mobile, Life360, and more, that nightmare should be over. 

The following post on X perfectly laid out just how many sites were affected by the massive outage.

A second post broke down the list of the sites affected and the massive number of companies that use AWS who were dead in the water due to the outage, and it’s shocking. The list includes companies like Lyft, Google, Delta Air, and The Associated Press, just to name a few.

After people woke up and couldn’t use their various platforms, Amazon released a statement confirming we weren’t imagining things, noting it was having what the company called “connectivity issues” with several popular websites and apps.





CEO of internet performance monitoring firm Catchpoint, Mehdi Daoudi, told CNN that the impact of the massive service disruption will cost in the “hundreds of billions.” 

CNN reported:

“The incident highlights the complexity and fragility of the internet, as well as how much every aspect of our work depends on the internet to work,” Daoudi said in a statement to CNN. “The financial impact of this outage will easily reach into the hundreds of billions due to loss in productivity for millions of workers that cannot do their job, plus business operations that are stopped or delayed — from airlines to factories.”

So, the good news is all is well after a chaotic Monday. The bad news is we just learned that way too many companies use the same web service. They might want to fix that to prevent a major platform outage like this again.


Editor’s Note: The Schumer Shutdown is here. Rather than put the American people first, Chuck Schumer and the radical Democrats forced a government shutdown for healthcare for illegals. They own this.



Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Prepare for the Upcoming Real Estate Surge: Insider Tips to Stay Ahead

The current climate for both residential and commercial real estate, as well…

Ron Paul Condemns Trump’s ‘Hysterical’ Critique of Rand Paul in Latest Political Clash

Former Texas Congressman and presidential hopeful Ron Paul publicly criticized President Trump…

Exploring the Fragile Ceasefire in Gaza: What Lies Ahead?

The Big Story *{box-sizing:border-box}body{margin:0;padding:0}a[x-apple-data-detectors]{color:inherit!important;text-decoration:inherit!important}#MessageViewBody a{color:inherit;text-decoration:none}p{line-height:inherit}.desktop_hide,.desktop_hide table{mso-hide:all;display:none;max-height:0;overflow:hidden}.image_block img+div{display:none}sub,sup{font-size:75%;line-height:0}#converted-body .list_block ol,#converted-body .list_block ul,.body [class~=x_list_block]…

Jasper Nathaniel Recounts Disturbing Encounter with Israeli Settlers: A First-Hand Account

An American journalist recently endured a harrowing attack by Israeli settlers while…

Fox News Host Jesse Watters Shocked by His Mom’s Participation in Massive ‘No Kings’ Anti-Trump Protest

Jesse Watters recently revealed that his politically liberal mother participated in the…

Inside the MAGA Makeover: How Two Glam Trumpers and a First Lady Cover Girl Challenge Vogue with Faith and Fashion

Imagine a blend of former Trump White House aides, a dash of…

President Biden Successfully Completes Radiation Therapy in Cancer Battle: A Milestone in Health Recovery

On Monday, it was announced by a spokesperson that former President Biden…

CBS Host Gayle King’s Selfie With Fox News’ Jesse Watters Sparks Strong Reactions Online

In the latest episode of “Why Can’t We Be Friends?”… CBS…