Multiple big-name websites and services, including Reddit, Hulu, EA, Max and the Xbox Network, went down for many users early today, leaving people locked out of apps, streams and games. Outage tracker Downdetector showed a sudden flood of error reports as the problems rippled through the internet. Coinbase confirmed it was hit too, and pointed the finger at an AWS outage for some customers’ access issues. In a tweet, Coinbase Support tried to calm nerves, saying: “We’re aware many users are currently unable to access Coinbase due to an AWS outage. Our team is working on the issue and we’ll provide updates here. All funds are safe.” That last line seemed especially aimed at anyone worrying their crypto might be at risk while the site hiccuped. Web3 Advocates Call for Decentralization The blackout quickly turned into a messy, familiar reminder of how much of the web runs on just a handful of cloud providers. Parity Technologies, the blockchain infrastructure shop, jumped into the conversation with a blunt take: “Another global AWS outage today, causing havoc with people’s work and personal flow. A reminder that most of the internet still depends on a few centralized clouds. Web3 infrastructure changes that, distributed, verifiable, and always online.” It wasn’t a subtle nudge; it was a call for alternatives. Lighthouse, a perpetual file storage protocol, called for the necessity of decentralization for the internet, tweeting, “When AWS sneezes, the internet catches a fever. Thousands of apps just went dark because one centralised cloud collapsed. This is why decentralization isn’t a buzzword, it’s a necessity.” On social media, people swapped screenshots, vented about interrupted downloads and joked about losing progress in games. Others were more anxious, posting about missed meetings, stalled transactions, or a livestream cut mid-sentence. Companies affected tried to reach users through status pages and alternate channels, but that patchwork approach highlighted how fragile the normal flow of digital life can be when a big cloud provider stumbles. Engineers at the impacted companies were reported to be working on fixes, and many of the official messages urged patience while teams dug into the problem. For most customers, the immediate relief was simple: wait for services to come back and keep an eye on official feeds for updates. Beyond the short-term frustration, the outage has already reignited a broader conversation among developers and infrastructure planners about redundancy and vendor concentration. Whether that will push more services toward decentralized, Web3-style infrastructure, as Parity suggested, is a bigger debate, but for now, the outage served as a blunt demonstration that when a dominant cloud goes down, it can take a surprisingly large slice of the internet with it.Multiple big-name websites and services, including Reddit, Hulu, EA, Max and the Xbox Network, went down for many users early today, leaving people locked out of apps, streams and games. Outage tracker Downdetector showed a sudden flood of error reports as the problems rippled through the internet. Coinbase confirmed it was hit too, and pointed the finger at an AWS outage for some customers’ access issues. In a tweet, Coinbase Support tried to calm nerves, saying: “We’re aware many users are currently unable to access Coinbase due to an AWS outage. Our team is working on the issue and we’ll provide updates here. All funds are safe.” That last line seemed especially aimed at anyone worrying their crypto might be at risk while the site hiccuped. Web3 Advocates Call for Decentralization The blackout quickly turned into a messy, familiar reminder of how much of the web runs on just a handful of cloud providers. Parity Technologies, the blockchain infrastructure shop, jumped into the conversation with a blunt take: “Another global AWS outage today, causing havoc with people’s work and personal flow. A reminder that most of the internet still depends on a few centralized clouds. Web3 infrastructure changes that, distributed, verifiable, and always online.” It wasn’t a subtle nudge; it was a call for alternatives. Lighthouse, a perpetual file storage protocol, called for the necessity of decentralization for the internet, tweeting, “When AWS sneezes, the internet catches a fever. Thousands of apps just went dark because one centralised cloud collapsed. This is why decentralization isn’t a buzzword, it’s a necessity.” On social media, people swapped screenshots, vented about interrupted downloads and joked about losing progress in games. Others were more anxious, posting about missed meetings, stalled transactions, or a livestream cut mid-sentence. Companies affected tried to reach users through status pages and alternate channels, but that patchwork approach highlighted how fragile the normal flow of digital life can be when a big cloud provider stumbles. Engineers at the impacted companies were reported to be working on fixes, and many of the official messages urged patience while teams dug into the problem. For most customers, the immediate relief was simple: wait for services to come back and keep an eye on official feeds for updates. Beyond the short-term frustration, the outage has already reignited a broader conversation among developers and infrastructure planners about redundancy and vendor concentration. Whether that will push more services toward decentralized, Web3-style infrastructure, as Parity suggested, is a bigger debate, but for now, the outage served as a blunt demonstration that when a dominant cloud goes down, it can take a surprisingly large slice of the internet with it.

AWS Outage Sparks Fresh Calls for Decentralization Across the Web3 Community

2025/10/21 00:30

Multiple big-name websites and services, including Reddit, Hulu, EA, Max and the Xbox Network, went down for many users early today, leaving people locked out of apps, streams and games. Outage tracker Downdetector showed a sudden flood of error reports as the problems rippled through the internet.

Coinbase confirmed it was hit too, and pointed the finger at an AWS outage for some customers’ access issues. In a tweet, Coinbase Support tried to calm nerves, saying: “We’re aware many users are currently unable to access Coinbase due to an AWS outage. Our team is working on the issue and we’ll provide updates here. All funds are safe.” That last line seemed especially aimed at anyone worrying their crypto might be at risk while the site hiccuped.

Web3 Advocates Call for Decentralization

The blackout quickly turned into a messy, familiar reminder of how much of the web runs on just a handful of cloud providers. Parity Technologies, the blockchain infrastructure shop, jumped into the conversation with a blunt take: “Another global AWS outage today, causing havoc with people’s work and personal flow. A reminder that most of the internet still depends on a few centralized clouds. Web3 infrastructure changes that, distributed, verifiable, and always online.” It wasn’t a subtle nudge; it was a call for alternatives.

Lighthouse, a perpetual file storage protocol, called for the necessity of decentralization for the internet, tweeting, “When AWS sneezes, the internet catches a fever. Thousands of apps just went dark because one centralised cloud collapsed. This is why decentralization isn’t a buzzword, it’s a necessity.”

On social media, people swapped screenshots, vented about interrupted downloads and joked about losing progress in games. Others were more anxious, posting about missed meetings, stalled transactions, or a livestream cut mid-sentence. Companies affected tried to reach users through status pages and alternate channels, but that patchwork approach highlighted how fragile the normal flow of digital life can be when a big cloud provider stumbles.

Engineers at the impacted companies were reported to be working on fixes, and many of the official messages urged patience while teams dug into the problem. For most customers, the immediate relief was simple: wait for services to come back and keep an eye on official feeds for updates.

Beyond the short-term frustration, the outage has already reignited a broader conversation among developers and infrastructure planners about redundancy and vendor concentration. Whether that will push more services toward decentralized, Web3-style infrastructure, as Parity suggested, is a bigger debate, but for now, the outage served as a blunt demonstration that when a dominant cloud goes down, it can take a surprisingly large slice of the internet with it.

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