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Amazon Web Services outage shows internet users ‘at mercy’ of too few providers, experts say

1 day ago
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Experts have warned of the perils of relying on a small number of companies for operating the global internet after a glitch at Amazon’s cloud computing service brought down apps and websites around the world.The affected platforms included Snapchat, Roblox, Signal and Duolingo as well as a host of Amazon-owned operations including its main retail site and the Ring doorbell company.More than 2,000 companies worldwide have been affected, according to Downdetector, a site that monitors internet outages, with 8.1m reports of problems from users including 1.9m reports in the US, 1m in the UK and 418,000 in Australia.

Many of the sites were restored after a few hours, but some experienced persistent problems throughout the day.By Monday evening, Amazon said all of its cloud services had “returned to normal operations”.In the UK, Lloyds bank was affected, as well as its subsidiaries Halifax and Bank of Scotland, while there were also problems accessing the HM Revenue and Customs website on Monday morning.Also in the UK, Ring users complained on social media that their doorbells were not working.In the UK alone, reports of problems on individual apps ran into the tens of thousands for each platform.

Other affected platforms around the world included Wordle, Coinbase, Duolingo, Slack, Pokémon Go, Epic Games, PlayStation Network and Peloton.By 10.30am UK time, Amazon was reporting that the problem, which first emerged at about 8am, was being resolved as AWS was “seeing significant signs of recovery”.However, after reporting further positive progress by late morning in the UK, Amazon still appeared to be struggling to overcome the glitch this afternoon as it acknowledged it was still experiencing elevated errors.“We can confirm significant API errors and connectivity issues across multiple services … We are investigating,” AWS said in an update at about 7am Pacific time and 3pm UK time.

To aid the recovery, AWS said it was putting in place limits on the number of requests that could be made on its platform,Experts said the outage underlined the dangers of the internet’s reliance on a small number of tech companies, with Amazon, Microsoft and Google playing a key role in the cloud market,Dr Corinne Cath-Speth, the head of digital at human rights organisation Article 19, said: “We urgently need diversification in cloud computing,The infrastructure underpinning democratic discourse, independent journalism and secure communications cannot be dependent on a handful of companies,”Cori Crider, the executive director of the Future of Technology Institute, a thinktank that supports a sovereign technology framework for Europe, said: “The UK can’t keep leaving its critical infrastructure at the mercy of US tech giants.

With Amazon Web Services down, we’ve seen the lights go out across the modern economy – from banking to communications.”Madeline Carr, professor of global politics and cybersecurity at University College London, said it was “hard to disagree” with warnings about the over-reliance of the global internet on a small number of companies.“The counter-argument is that it’s these large hyper-scaling companies that have the financial resources to provide a secure, global and resilient service.But most people outside those companies would argue that is a risky position for the world to be in.”Last year, airports, healthcare services and businesses worldwide were hit by the “largest outage in history”, caused by a botched software upgrade from cybersecurity company CrowdStrike that hit Microsoft’s Windows operating system.

Amazon reported that the problem on Monday originated in the east coast of the US at Amazon Web Services, a unit that provides vital web infrastructure for a host of companies, which rent out space on Amazon servers.AWS is the world’s largest cloud computing platform.Shortly after midnight (PDT) in the US (8am BST) on Monday, Amazon confirmed “increased error rates and latencies” for AWS services in a region on the east coast of the US.The ripple effect hit services around the world, with Downdetector reporting problems with the same sites in multiple continents.Cisco’s Thousand Eyes, a service that tracks internet outages, also reported a surge in problems on Monday morning, with many of them located in Virginia, the location of Amazon’s US-East-1 region, where AWS said the problems began and where AWS has a number of datacentres.

Experts said the outage appeared to be an IT issue rather than a cyber-attack.AWS’s online health dashboard referred to DynamoDB, its database system where AWS customers store their data.Amazon appeared to rule out foul play, saying the root cause was an internal subsystem responsible for monitoring its load balancers, which prevent traffic from overloading its servers.“The incident appears to have been caused by some accident within AWS, rather than being the result of any malicious intent,” said Steven Murdoch, a professor of security engineering at University College London.The UK government has said it is in contact with Amazon over the outage.

A spokesperson said: “We are aware of an incident affecting Amazon Web Services, and several online services which rely on their infrastructure,Through our established incident response arrangements, we are in contact with the company, who are working to restore services as quickly as possible,”The House of Commons’ treasury committee in the UK has written to the economic secretary to the Treasury, Lucy Rigby, to ask why the government had not yet designated Amazon a “critical third party” to the UK’s financial services sector – which would expose the tech firm to financial regulatory oversight,The committee chair, Meg Hillier, pointed out that Amazon had recently told the committee that financial services customers were using AWS to support their “resilience” and that AWS offered “multiple layers of protection”,
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Champagne, celebs and artefacts: British Museum hosts first lavish ‘pink ball’ fundraiser

There will be champagne, of course, and dancing, fine Indian food served alongside the Parthenon marbles and cocktails mixed in front of the Renaissance treasures of the Waddesdon bequest. And everywhere – from the lights illuminating the Greek revival architecture, to the carpet on which guests arrive, to the glamorous outfits they are requested to wear – a very particular shade of pink.When the British Museum throws open its doors on Saturday evening for its first “pink ball”, it will not only be hosting an enormous and lavish party, but also inaugurating what its director, Nicholas Cullinan, has called a “flagship national event” that he hopes will become as important to his institution’s finances as it will to the London elite’s social calendar.Eight hundred invited guests have each paid £2,000 to party alongside some of the world’s most sensational artefacts and a roll call of bigwigs from the worlds of fashion, art and culture: Naomi Campbell and Alexa Chung, Miuccia Prada and Manolo Blahnik, Sir Steve McQueen and Sir Grayson Perry and Dame Kristin Scott Thomas.As well as glitz, however, there will be brass

3 days ago
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My cultural awakening: ‘The Specials helped me to stop fixating on death’

My anxious disposition means I think about death a lot. But a cluster of people I loved dying in 2023, and most of them unexpectedly and within a few months of each other, was enough to shake my nervous system up pretty significantly. Five funerals is too many. The first was my nan: she was the family matriarch. The oldest person in the family, so there was a level of acceptance among the sadness

4 days ago
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From After the Hunt to the Last Dinner Party: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

After the HuntOut nowJulia Roberts stars in the latest from Challengers director Luca Guadagnino: a cancel-culture thriller set in the aftermath of an accusation of sexual assault on a college campus. She plays a philosophy professor at Yale, whose colleague Hank (Andrew Garfield) claims he is innocent of the charges against him.FrankensteinOut nowYears in the making, decades in the dreaming, Guillermo del Toro’s splendidly visceral take on one of literature’s true greats, starring Oscar Isaac as the eponymous scientist and an unrecognisable Jacob Elordi, asthe Creature, is long and messy and brilliant. It deserves to be seen on the big screen (though a Netflix release is following hot on the heels of this cinema release if you do miss it).SunlightOut nowComedian Nina Conti makes her directing debut with a deliciously dark road trip comedy that isn’t for the faint of heart

4 days ago
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The Guide #213: Should we mourn the demise of TV channels?

For seasoned tea-leaf readers of the future of TV in the UK, two stories will have stood out this week, swirling around at the bottom of their cups. There was the news that MTV is shutting down its music channels – sad for those of us who misspent their youth watching them, though hardly surprising either, given MTV’s decades-long shift away from music and towards rolling repeats of Teen Mom and shows about tattooists. And there was a media piece in the Guardian about the demise of British TV’s once-gold plated 9pm slot, which for the first time last month failed to achieve a rating of 1m or more among any of the major broadcasters.That second story was a little surprising. Overnight viewing figures are in constant decline in the streaming age, but even by those standards, not one solitary rating over 1m is eye-catching

4 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on the Republicans: ‘So much greed and hypocrisy and duplicity’

Late-night hosts spoke about Donald Trump’s attempts to transform the White House and how he was “cashing in bigly” on being president.On Jimmy Kimmel Live! the host spoke about Trump’s “goon squad” indicting his former national security adviser John Bolton while the president was still “brazenly lying about the economy”.This week Trump also met with Vladimir Putin, something he bragged about on social media before claiming that he is the only president to have ended a war. “All the other wars ended mysteriously by themselves,” Kimmel said.Trump also “still has his eye on the ballroom” hosting an event for investors willing to help fund a renovation

4 days ago
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Laurence Fox’s libel claim over racism accusations to go to retrial

Laurence Fox’s libel claim after he was called a racist on social media will go to a retrial, the court of appeal has ruled.The former actor was successfully sued by Simon Blake, who is now the chief executive of Stonewall, and the drag artist Crystal over a row on the social media platform Twitter, now called X.Fox, 47, called Blake and the former RuPaul’s Drag Race contestant, whose real name is Colin Seymour, “paedophiles” in an exchange about a decision by Sainsbury’s to mark Black History Month in October 2020.Fox called for a boycott of the supermarket and was called “a racist” by the men, as well as by the broadcaster Nicola Thorp, before he responded with the “paedophile” tweets which led to the initial libel claims.In two judgments in 2024, Mrs Justice Collins Rice ruled in favour of Blake and Seymour, and said Fox should pay them £90,000 each in damages

4 days ago
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Amazon says Web Services are recovering after outage hits millions of users – as it happened

about 22 hours ago
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Labour’s clean energy plan needs a revamp: get real on costs and ignore the artificial deadline | Nils Pratley

1 day ago
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Pizza Hut to close 68 UK restaurants, putting up to 1,200 jobs at risk

1 day ago
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SlimFast’s European arm sold after struggling to compete with weight-loss drugs

1 day ago
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Secret Cinema company is bought by Hollywood power broker

1 day ago
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China’s economic growth slows amid Trump tariff war and property woes

1 day ago