Amazon Cloud Outage Disrupts Global Online Services, Gradual Recovery Underway

Amazon’s cloud computing giant, Amazon Web Services (AWS), faced a major outage on Monday that disrupted numerous online platforms — from banking and social media services to business applications worldwide. Although the system is slowly recovering, the incident underscored how dependent the modern digital ecosystem is on AWS’s infrastructure.

According to Amazon, the disruption was triggered by a Domain Name System (DNS) failure that prevented applications from locating the correct address for DynamoDB — a key database service used to store user data and other critical information. The DNS essentially functions as the internet’s phone book, converting domain names into numerical IP addresses. Without it, apps could not reach the required servers.

The root of the issue was traced to AWS’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) network in the US-EAST-1 region, located in northern Virginia — one of the company’s most frequently used and default data centers. This region has been the source of several previous incidents, including a 2023 capacity issue that affected AWS Lambda services and a 2021 congestion event that paralyzed popular tools like Ring, Chime, and iRobot devices.

Despite the recent disruption, AWS continues to dominate the cloud market, reporting a revenue of $30.9 billion in the second quarter of this year — an 18% increase compared to the previous year. The event, however, has reignited discussions about the fragility of centralized cloud infrastructures and the global ripple effects of regional failures.