AWS said that it has identified the problem with a fix starting to take hold.

”We are seeing significant signs of recovery,” the company said in its latest update.

“Most requests should now be succeeding. We continue to work through a backlog of queued requests.”

The issue has focused mainly on AWS’s US services and clients.

Some services used in Irish industry have been disrupted. The construction, engineering and architectural software platform Autodesk said that some of its services across the EU have been affected.

However, some Irish government and public sector services, are reportedly unaffected. AWS’s Irish operations are included in its EU West 1 region.

Stock image Photo: Alamy/PA

Stock image Photo: Alamy/PA

News in 90 Seconds – October 20th

AWS previously said it was seeing increased “error rates and latencies” for multiple services. “We are working on multiple parallel paths to accelerate recovery,” it said in an update.

The AWS outage is the first major internet disruption since last year’s CrowdStrike malfunction that hobbled technology systems in hospitals, banks and airports globally.

AWS provides on-demand computing power, data storage and other digital services to companies, governments and individuals. Disruptions to its servers can cause outages across websites and platforms that rely on its cloud infrastructure. AWS competes with Google’s and Microsoft’s cloud services.

AWS directed Reuters to its status page when requested for a comment. Amazon did not respond to a request for comment.

AI startup Perplexity, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase and trading app Robinhood attributed the outages to AWS.

“Perplexity is down right now. The root cause is an AWS issue. We’re working on resolving it,” Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas said in a post on X.

Amazon’s shopping website, PrimeVideo and Alexa were all facing issues, according to Downdetector.

Duolingo, Canva, Life360, My Fitness Pal, Wordle, HMRC, Vodafone, Playstation and Pokémon Go were also suffering problems.

Fortnite, owned by Epic Games, Roblox Clash Royale and Clash of Clans were among the gaming platforms that were down, while Paypal’s Venmo and Chime were some of the financial platforms that faced issues, the outage tracking website said.

Uber rival Lyft’s app was also down for thousands of users in the U.S.

Messaging app Signal’s President Meredith Whittaker confirmed on X that the company’s platform was hit by the AWS outage as well.

Britain’s Lloyd Bank, Bank of Scotland and telecom service providers Vodafone and BT were also facing issues, according to DownDetecor’s UK website. The country’s tax, payments and customs authority HMRC’s website too was hit by the outage.

However, billionaire Elon Musk, the owner of social media company X, said that his platform continued to work. “X works,” he said, without commenting further.

The issues began around 8am this morning, or midnight pacific time.

More to follow…