Illustration of an AWS data center outage with engineers troubleshooting server issues and global disruption map.
Image generated by AI

AWS outage disrupts global websites and services

Image generated by AI

A major outage at Amazon Web Services' US-EAST-1 region in northern Virginia caused widespread internet disruptions on Monday morning, October 20, 2025. DNS resolution issues affected numerous platforms, including Amazon's own services and third-party apps. The incident highlighted vulnerabilities in cloud infrastructure.

The outage originated in AWS's key US-EAST-1 region, located in northern Virginia near the US Capitol, and stemmed from DNS resolution problems. It began early on Monday morning, leading to interruptions across a broad array of websites and platforms worldwide.

Amazon's primary ecommerce site, Ring doorbells, and Alexa smart assistant experienced outages throughout the morning. Other impacted services included Meta's WhatsApp, OpenAI's ChatGPT, PayPal's Venmo, and multiple web services from Epic Games. British government sites also faced disruptions, alongside gaming platforms like Fortnite, Roblox, Wordle, and the Epic Games Store.

Work-related applications were hit hard, with Zoom, Slack, Canva, and Signal among those affected. Social media and communication tools such as Snapchat and Reddit saw interruptions as well. Reports indicated that some services, including Fortnite and what appears to be Battlefield-related gaming, began recovering later in the morning.

Amazon was nearing a solution by mid-morning, according to updates. The event underscored a persistent weakness in the internet's infrastructure, where reliance on a single cloud region can cascade into global issues. No specific timeline for full resolution was detailed, but disruptions were described as taking down 'wide swaths of the web' and giving the internet 'a very bad day.'

Related Articles

Illustration of a global Microsoft Azure outage affecting services worldwide, including in Sweden, showing a user facing an error screen with a map of impacted areas.
Image generated by AI

Microsoft azure hit by global outages

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Microsoft's cloud service Azure suffered major issues on Wednesday, affecting services worldwide including in Sweden. The disruptions began around 5 p.m. Swedish time and are expected to be resolved by midnight. Several Swedish sites like Systembolaget and SAS were temporarily down.

Cloudflare suffered a major outage on November 18, 2025, rendering millions of websites worldwide, including X and ChatGPT, inaccessible for about three hours. The company confirmed the issue stemmed from an old bug triggered by a routine configuration change, not a cyber attack. Cloudflare apologized for the global impact on customers.

Reported by AI

The social media platform X, formerly Twitter, experienced an intermittent outage starting around 7 a.m. PT on January 16, 2026, affecting users worldwide and its AI chatbot Grok. Reports spiked on Downdetector, with issues lingering for several hours before full resolution by early afternoon.

GameStop's website and app experienced a significant outage on January 21, 2026, affecting numerous users. The service is now back online, resolving the issue that prevented access for many. TechRadar reports that those unable to load the site or app were not alone during the disruption.

Reported by AI

TikTok has returned to normal operations in the US following outages linked to a winter storm that knocked out an Oracle data center. The disruptions began on January 26, affecting users with bugs and display errors, amid recent changes in the app's ownership. The company apologized to its community for the inconvenience.

Since early Saturday morning, around 45,000 households and 2,200 businesses in Berlin's southwest have been without power, caused by a fire on a cable bridge over the Teltow Canal. Police are investigating arson, and a claim of responsibility is under review. Power restoration could take until Thursday, January 8, 2026.

Reported by AI

Power outages affected more than 7000 users in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area minutes before 10 p.m. on Friday. Edesur's concession area was the hardest hit, with low voltage reports linked to heat and maintenance works. Storms are expected to arrive earlier than anticipated on Saturday, December 13, in the region, according to the National Meteorological Service.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline