Amazon Says AWS Cloud Service Back to Normal
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The internet fell apart Monday due to outages at a single company: Amazon Web Services, the world’s largest cloud provider that powers many of the most popular apps and services we use.
Amazon has agreed to pay a $2.5 billion settlement after coercing customers into subscriptions. Here's how to know if you are eligible for payments.
The outage affected websites like Coinbase and Fortnite, and disrupted services like Signal, Zoom, and Amazon's own products, including Ring.
Internal documents show the company that changed how people shop has a far-reaching plan to automate 75 percent of its operations.
The Toronto Blue Jays are headed to their first MLB World Series since 1993 after a dramatic 4-3 win over the Seattle Mariners on Monday. They’ll now take on the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers.
The New York Times reported today, citing interviews and internal documents, that Amazon’s automation team expects that by 2027, the company could avoid hiring more than 160,000 U.S. workers it would normally need. If true, that would save the company about 30 cents on every item it packs and delivers.
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Ex-Amazon driver sues civil rights agency for dropping her case following Trump's executive order
A former Amazon delivery driver has filed a lawsuit accusing a federal civil right agency of abruptly and unlawfully abandoning her sex discrimination case and others like it following an executive order from President Donald Trump.
An outage at Amazon Web Services (AWS), the cloud computing platform that powers much of the internet, went down for several hours Monday, making several major websites and apps inoperable.