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Amazon reports strongest cloud growth since 2022 after major outage

3 days ago
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Amazon has made its first financial disclosures since the disastrous outage suffered by its cloud computing division that brought everything from smart beds to banks offline.In spite of the global outage, Amazon Web Services has continued to grow, and this quarter reported a 20% increase in revenue year over year.Wall Street estimated that AWS would bring in $32.42bn in net sales in the third quarter, with the company reporting actual revenue of $33bn.“AWS is growing at a pace we haven’t seen since 2022,” CEO Andy Jassy said in a statement accompanying the earnings report.

The strong third-quarter earnings, which exceeded analysts’ expectations, led the company’s stock to spike up about 9% in after-hours trading.The earnings report highlighted Amazon’s desire to compete with other companies that have managed to capitalize more aggressively on the AI boom.Amazon’s stock has lagged behind some rivals in big tech, and its e-commerce business has been more susceptible to the effects of the Trump administration’s sweeping and unpredictable tariff policies than firms more focused on software.The tech company, worth some $2.4tn, revealed that it easily beat Wall Street expectations through growth in its cloud computing services.

Market analysts had predicted that Amazon would report $1,58 earnings per share and a net sales revenue of $177,82bn,The company reached $180,17bn in revenue and $1.

95 earnings per share.AWS has faced increasing competition from alternative providers such as Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure, with the latter’s partnership with OpenAI and reports of strong growth in its cloud business driving up its share price.Yet AWS is still a backbone of much of the modern internet, with an inadvertent show of its power taking place earlier this month when a glitch in the company’s cloud computing took websites, apps, tech products and critical communications systems, such as electronic hospital records, offline.The outage affected millions of people and lasted hours, underscoring how reliant many parts of everyday life are on Amazon’s products.During the earnings call, Amazon’s executives touted the incorporation of AI tools such as the Rufus shopping assistant into its platforms and services.

They also mentioned efforts to grow its Zoox robotaxi business, stating that they would begin testing the autonomous driving service in Washington DC later this year.At Amazon headquarters, the company confirmed plans earlier this week to lay off 14,000 corporate workers, while further job cuts are expected throughout the company.The tech company publicly announced the cuts in a post on its website titled “Staying nimble and continuing to strengthen our organizations”, which referenced advancements in AI and claimed the company wanted to “operate like the world’s largest startup”.“What we need to remember is that the world is changing quickly,” Amazon’s post stated.“This generation of AI is the most transformative technology we’ve seen since the Internet, and it’s enabling companies to innovate much faster than ever before.

”Sign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionJassy suggested in a blog post earlier this year that the company’s investments in AI would mean that Amazon needs “fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today”,On the investor call, however, Jassy denied that the mass layoffs were driven by AI and instead claimed that they were a result of “culture”, saying the company was trying to emphasize a more malleable, startup-style operation,“The announcement that we made a few days ago was not really financially driven, and it’s not even really AI-driven, not right now,It really is culture,” Jassy said,The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.

If you have something to share on this subject, you can contact us confidentially using the following methods.Secure Messaging in the Guardian appThe Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories.Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs.This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said.If you don't already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu.

Select ‘Secure Messaging’,SecureDrop, instant messengers, email, telephone and postIf you can safely use the Tor network without being observed or monitored, you can send messages and documents to the Guardian via our SecureDrop platform,Finally, our guide at theguardian,com/tips lists several ways to contact us securely, and discusses the pros and cons of each,
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The London consensus is a timely challenge to Trump’s isolationism | Phillip Inman

What replaces neoliberal capitalism is a question at the forefront of Donald Trump’s mind every day.The US president has never much liked those elements of the Washington consensus that celebrate free markets and liberal trade, as we have come to see in both his presidencies.Trump can happily accept the neoliberal agenda when it means privatising government agencies and commonly held assets. He is enthusiastic about deregulation and handing the private sector all the freedom it needs to exploit workers and resources to boost profits.But what Trump’s America First agenda cannot live with is tariff-free trade

1 day ago
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‘It’s brutal, they feel very attacked’: budget uncertainty hits Southampton boat show

“What would happen if red wine got on that?” It is a common enough question when perusing a carpet store. But, as it happens, the same query crops up when shopping for a yacht. “Oh, you’d never get it off that decking,” the other half of a young couple replies as they size up one of the £2m triple-decker yachts moored at the recent Southampton international boat show.Top boat manufacturers descended on the port city from across Europe to show off bigger, better and bolder yachts than ever before, as well as lines of smaller sailing and motor boats. But the show, once a must-attend of the season alongside exhibitions in Cannes and Monaco, has shrunk by about 30% this year, according to some vendors’ estimates

2 days ago
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Nexperia halts chip supplies to China in threat to global car production

Nexperia, the EU-based automotive chipmaker at the centre of a geopolitical dispute, has suspended supplies to its Chinese factory, stepping up a trade war that threatens to halt production at carmakers around the world.The company wrote to customers this week informing them all supplies to a Chinese plant had been suspended.In September, the Netherlands used national security laws to take control of the chipmaker, citing concerns that its Chinese owner, Wingtech Technologies, was planning to shift intellectual property to another company it owned. The Dutch government said that threatened the future of European chip capacity, and removed the Wingtech chairman, Zhang Xuezheng, as chief executive.China responded by halting exports from all Nexperia’s factories in China, prompting warnings this week that the embargo would force production lines at EU car factories to close within days

2 days ago
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JP Morgan warned US of $1bn in Epstein transactions possibly related to human trafficking

JP Morgan warned the US government about more than $1bn in transactions linked to Jeffrey Epstein that were possibly related to reports of human trafficking, new documents confirm.The largest bank in the US filed a suspicious activity report (SAR) in 2019, just weeks after Epstein was found dead in a New York jail cell, about transactions linked to the paedophile financier and prominent business figures. It also flagged wire transfers made by Epstein to Russian banks.JP Morgan’s report said it had flagged about 4,700 transactions, totalling more than $1bn, that were potentially related to reports of human trafficking involving Epstein, the New York Times reported. The report, filed during the last Trump administration, also flagged sensitivities around Epstein’s “relationships with two U

3 days ago
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Ministers’ claims to have helped JLR in doubt as £1.5bn support left untouched

Jaguar Land Rover has not drawn down any of a £1.5bn loan facility guaranteed by the government, with suppliers expressing anger over ministers’ claims to have supported the carmaker’s supply chain after a crippling hack.Britain’s biggest automotive employer was forced to shut down all of its wholly owned factories from 1 September for more than a month, after cyber-attackers compromised key computer systems.Liam Byrne, the Labour MP who heads of parliament’s business select committee, on Friday wrote to the business secretary, Peter Kyle, asking for clarification as to whether any money had reached JLR, and if the aid was requested by the carmaker.Suppliers to JLR have privately expressed anger about the government’s messaging, which appeared to take credit for helping them

3 days ago
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Amazon shares surge as AI boom fuels cloud growth; Nvidia boss says selling chips in China is Trump’s call – as it happened

Time to recap.Amazon is leading the charge in the US stock market today, with its shares surging by about 11% after its third quarter earnings beat expectations last night.The tech giant reported a 20% surge in sales at its cloud computing division, Amazon Web Services, to $33bn thanks to demand for computing power for artificial intelligence.In the UK, the tinned tuna maker Princes Group has kicked off a float with a valuation of nearly £1.2bn in a boost for the London stock market

3 days ago
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Reform councillor defects to Tories after party’s policies left him ‘uncomfortable’

2 days ago
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Ex-Tory member sues party over suspension for criticising Israel

2 days ago
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Bridget Phillipson ‘ready to take on unions’ over year 8 reading tests

2 days ago
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UK politics: Worries about immigration are ‘manufactured panic’ says charity as poll shows issue not a local concern – as it happened

3 days ago
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Keir Starmer keeps Trumps’ silver necklace gift – for a price

3 days ago
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‘Young Tories are fed up’: the students switching to Reform in big numbers

3 days ago