Amazon's AWS reports outage
Digest more
Missile strikes damage AWS UAE data centers, disrupting banking and delivery apps across Dubai and the wider Emirates.
Amazon (AMZN) stock fell 2% after drone strikes damaged AWS data centers in UAE and Bahrain, disrupting cloud services including EC2, S3, and DynamoDB.
Traditionally, military operations targeted oil facilities, ports or power plants — assets that could cripple an opponent’s economy. But in the digital era, data centres and communications networks play a similar strategic role.
AWS has confirmed that two data centers in the Gulf states of UAE and Bahrain were "directly" hit by drones. The situation remains unpredictable.
Three AWS facilities were affected due to drone strikes in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and a facility in Bahrain.
Amazon Web Services generated $35.58 billion in revenue, according to a statement. Analysts polled by StreetAccount had expected $34.93 billion. AWS represented about 17% of Amazon's total revenue for the quarter.
AWS launched "Security Hub Extended" that solves the massive workload involved in cross domain security solution correlation and management.
BC Platforms, a global leader in healthcare data, technology, and analytics today announced enhancements to BC Mosaic, its AI-powered trusted research environment (TRE), now available on AWS Marketplace.
Krish TechnoLabs achieves AWS Advanced Tier Partner status, strengthening its expertise in delivering secure, scalable