Outage

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Frustrated customers facing Amazon website error screens during March 2026 outage, with outage graph peaking at 20,000 reports.
Image generated by AI

Amazon website outage disrupts shopping before quick resolution

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Amazon's website and mobile app experienced technical issues on March 5, 2026, preventing users from logging in, viewing prices, and completing purchases. The outage peaked around 3 p.m. ET with over 20,000 reports but was resolved by evening, according to the company. Amazon attributed the problem to a software code deployment and confirmed its cloud services operated normally.

X, formerly Twitter, experienced a brief worldwide outage on March 18, 2026, which was quickly resolved, as reported by TechRadar.

Reported by AI

An Oracle data center failure is reportedly behind the latest TikTok service disruptions in the United States, marking the second major incident involving the cloud provider's infrastructure in 2026. This follows a January outage triggered by a winter storm. Details emerged in a TechRadar report on March 4, 2026.

Steam, the popular online gaming platform, suffered a partial outage on December 24, affecting access to its store and online multiplayer games. The disruption began around 1PM ET and started recovering by late afternoon, though some services remained sluggish. Valve has not publicly acknowledged the issue.

Reported by AI

A massive power outage struck Mayotte on December 23, affecting the entire overseas department. The incident, occurring in the early afternoon, disrupted communications and water supply. The prefecture reports that 92% of subscribers were reconnected by evening.

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.

Reported by AI

A software bug in Amazon Web Services' DynamoDB DNS management system triggered a 15-hour outage affecting millions worldwide. The failure originated in the US-East-1 region and cascaded to impact services like Snapchat and Roblox. Amazon engineers detailed the root cause as a race condition that led to inconsistent network states.

 

 

 

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