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The Amazon Web Services outage affected the world's largest websites. What's known and why it matters

The Amazon Web Services outage affected the world's largest websites. What's known and why it matters

The Amazon Web Services outage affected the world's largest websites. What's known and why it matters

What happened: AWS outage in the US-East-1 region

Around midnight Pacific Time, users began reporting outages on popular websites and services. Downdetector reported problems on
Amazon , Reddit, Disney+, Snapchat, Canva, Coinbase, Roblox, Fortnite, and other platforms.

The cause was an infrastructure failure at Amazon Web Services (AWS) , the world's largest cloud provider, which powers a significant portion of the internet.
The error originated in the US-East-1 region (Northern Virginia) , a key AWS data center serving millions of requests per second.

The company stated that the outage was due to a DNS issue in the DynamoDB database , which powers many services. DNS (Domain Name System) is responsible for translating website addresses into IP addresses; without it, websites simply stop being online.

The scale of the consequences: who suffered

According to Downdetector, the outage affected more than 70 AWS services , including:

Amazon, Disney+, Lyft, McDonald's App, Reddit, The New York Times, Snapchat, Ring, Robinhood, T-Mobile, United Airlines, Venmo, Verizon.

UK Government Resources (Gov.uk, HMRC).
Banking services of Lloyds Banking Group.

The crypto exchange Coinbase , where users temporarily lost access to their accounts.

Cloud games Roblox and Fortnite , where players were unable to log into sessions en masse.
The Amazon Web Services outage affected the world's largest websites. What's known and why it matters

The Amazon Web Services outage affected the world's largest websites. What's known and why it matters

How AWS solved the problem

AWS officially acknowledged a "major incident" and stated that engineers were "working on multiple parallel tracks to expedite recovery. "
By 3:35 AM Pacific Time, the company announced that the outage had been "fully resolved" and services had resumed normal operations.

However, the update noted that "some requests are being processed in a limited mode" and "some services are clearing backlogs of requests."

Experts: The problem is not the attack, but the vulnerability of the architecture

Why this outage is a wake-up call for businesses

Modern companies depend on the cloud as much as they depend on electricity. A two- to three-hour downtime can cost millions of dollars.
That's why experts talk not only about cybersecurity but also about cyberresilience —the ability of a business to remain operational during provider outages.

Implications for Europe and the US

Services serving North America and the UK , where AWS has its primary workload, were particularly affected.
According to the UK government, specialists were in direct contact with Amazon to expedite the restoration of online services.

Lloyds Banking Group reported short-term issues accessing customer accounts. United and Delta Airlines experienced disruptions to online check-in and baggage handling.

For Europe, the case has become an argument in favor of diversifying cloud providers and strengthening regional data centers to reduce dependence on the US.

What's Next: The Age of Cloud Congestion

Experts predict that by 2030, up to 80% of digital services will run on the infrastructure of just three companies: Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.
This creates not only technological concentration but also geopolitical vulnerability —especially for financial and government institutions.

In response, AWS and its competitors are investing billions of dollars in distributed clouds, redundant links, and autonomous data clusters to prevent such incidents from recurring.

The world depends on clouds – and it’s dangerous

The AWS outage was a stark reminder: digital civilization rests on an invisible infrastructure controlled by a handful of corporations.
And if one of them fails, the consequences are felt from Silicon Valley to London.

In the future, internet resilience will be determined not by the capacity of data centers, but by the ability to distribute risks .
Only a multi-layered architecture, multi-cloud solutions, and preparedness for failures will ensure true security for the digital economy.
Written by Ethan Blake
Independent researcher, fintech consultant, and market analyst.

October 20, 2025

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