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ASPartOfMe
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20 Oct 2025, 5:25 pm

Internet services outage leaves websites and apps lagging across the world

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Websites and services across the United States and around the world were struggling to recover Monday after a problem at Amazon Web Services (AWS) left leading games, publishers, streaming platforms and other apps unusable to millions of people.

The cloud hosting service that underpins much of the web and everyday online tools went offline after 3 a.m. because of a problem with one of its core database products, the company said.

Problems persisted through Monday morning, according to the company.

The outage affected users of sites ranging from Snapchat to the McDonald's app and Amazon's Ring doorbell cameras to gaming platforms Roblox and Fortnite. It underlines the fragility of companies — including financial services — that use cloud-based servers to host their data, and how suddenly businesses across the globe can be affected by an unplanned outage.

AWS first reported a problem at 3:11 a.m. ET and said it was dealing with an "operational issue" affecting 14 different services in its center in northern Virginia, at its U.S.-East-1 Region center.

The Downdetector website received 6.5 million reports that more than 1,000 sites and services across the world were offline.

Snapchat said that some users were "having issues," with some posting on social media that their friends' lists and daily streaks had disappeared.

United Airlines, T-Mobile, Starbucks and McDonald were also having issues. Delta said it had seen minor delays after the outage. The U.S. federal health insurance program Medicare also seemed to be affected. Users attempting to participate in its open enrollment period said they couldn't log into the website Monday afternoon. The British government was also affected, with its HM Revenue and Customs website not accessible to some users. United Healthcare's provider search tool continued to malfunction throughout Monday.

At 6:35 a.m. ET, AWS said the database problem that caused the outage was "fully mitigated" but warned that there may still be delays.

But at 10:14 a.m. ET, AWS confirmed "significant API errors and connectivity issues across multiple services in the US-EAST-1 Region," saying it was investigating.

At 4:03 p.m. ET, AWS said that it was seeing improvements in its services and that it was reducing limits it had placed on customer requests, though issues appeared to persist for service like Apple Music and Fanduel into the early evening, according to Downdetector.

The problem stemmed from an error with Amazon's EC2 internal network, which impacted AWS services including DynamoDB, SQS and Amazon Connect, the company said. "The root cause is an underlying internal subsystem responsible for monitoring the health of our network load balancers," the company said in a statement at 11:43 a.m. ET, referring to technology that distributes traffic across various servers. AWS says it is limiting new activity requests from customers as it works to restore full functionality to its services.

The service also went down in 2023 and in 2021, when customers found that they couldn’t access airline reservations and payment apps during the five-hour outage.

This time, social media posts reported problems with cloud-based games, social networks and Amazon's own services like Prime Video and Kindle.

Messaging services such as Signal were also affected, prompting Article 19, a nongovernmental organization that promotes freedom of expression, to warn of the democratic consequences of such outages.

"These disruptions are not just technical issues, they’re democratic failures. When a single provider goes dark, critical services go offline with it — media outlets become inaccessible, secure communication apps like Signal stop functioning, and the infrastructure that serves our digital society crumbles," said Corinne Cath-Speth, Article 19’s head of digital.

Tech mogul Elon Musk also weighed in on the outage's impact on Signal, calling it "pretty weird," and saying "AWS is in the loop and can take out Signal at any time."

Coinbase, the largest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange, said its services were unavailable because of the AWS outage.

The trading app Robinhood, the payments app Venmo and the language learning app DuoLingo also appeared to be experiencing issues on Monday.

Media organizations, including Disney and The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, were also apparently affected, according to Downdetector. The Associated Press said that it was also experiencing issues and that it had enabled its "AP Backup" system for people to access breaking news.

AWS customers were unable to report the problem because its automated support ticking system was also offline.


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PRR
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21 Oct 2025, 4:12 pm

Dave Plummer, an ex-Microsoft dude, delves into the outage.

YouTube, "Why the Web was Down - Explained by a Retired Microsoft Engineer"

Dave is a real geek. I could not get to the end, but the first 3 or 5 minutes seems a fair summary.



AnonymousAnonymous
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21 Oct 2025, 4:15 pm

Is the Internet back online now?


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Mona Pereth
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21 Oct 2025, 6:14 pm

I wouldn't call this an "Internet" outage.

Luckily, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is not the entire Internet, or even the entire World Wide Web. AWS is just a web hosting provider, one of many, albeit one of the very biggest ones.

They are not a monopoly (yet) and should not be allowed to become one.


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Last edited by Mona Pereth on 21 Oct 2025, 6:21 pm, edited 2 times in total.

Mona Pereth
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21 Oct 2025, 6:17 pm

AnonymousAnonymous wrote:
Is the Internet back online now?

The fact that you were able to post this message means (1) the Internet must have been working when you posted it and (2) Wrong Planet's hosting provider, whichever company that might be, was not down at that time either.

Luckily the Internet is decentralized. No one company owns it.


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21 Oct 2025, 6:52 pm

Interesting , the comment about a failure of Democracy....So , the fact that the government did not break up the internet providers biggies, Monopolies on internet access. Has already shown its shameful inattentiveness to attempt
to keep the USA with a fair market economy..For the net. Services .. So being there might be so few individual Large server farms. If some entity foriegn Gov. wanted to throw a country into a partial collapse/ shutdown. Just mess up a few big Companies sever farms. Snd if you rely solely on the net for info? Who would tell you WW3 had begun?lolz


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Mona Pereth
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21 Oct 2025, 7:34 pm

IMO governments should have their own data centers. They might contract out to private companies to run them, but they should be separate from commercial data centers.


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