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AWS suffers 15-hour outage as AI competition intensifies
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Amazon Web Services experienced one of its worst outages in history on Monday, with a 15-hour disruption that took down its most critical data center cluster and affected hundreds of companies and consumer applications. The prolonged outage highlights growing concerns about AWS’s competitive position as the company that pioneered cloud computing now appears to be losing ground to rivals, particularly in artificial intelligence capabilities.

The big picture: AWS, which transformed from an internal Amazon startup into the company’s primary profit engine, is facing unprecedented challenges to its market dominance after years of dictating terms across the cloud industry.

What happened: The massive outage disrupted a wide range of services and operations across multiple sectors.
• Trading platforms went offline, preventing financial transactions.
• Digital learning platforms used by students became inaccessible.
• Seattle’s online utility payment systems were knocked out, affecting Amazon’s own hometown.
• The disruption lasted 15 hours before AWS restored all services.

Why this matters: The outage comes at a time when AWS is already perceived as trailing competitors in the rapidly growing artificial intelligence market.
• Amazon essentially created the cloud computing industry by breaking down corporate data centers into pay-as-you-go services.
• The company’s cloud division became Amazon’s main profit driver and gave Seattle executives significant industry influence.
• However, AWS is now “widely perceived as trailing its rivals in artificial intelligence,” according to industry observers.

Broader context: This incident underscores the vulnerability of businesses that rely heavily on single cloud providers and raises questions about AWS’s operational resilience during a critical period for the company’s competitive positioning.

Amazon’s AWS Shows Signs of Weakness as Competitors Charge Ahead

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