Iranian missile blitz takes down AWS data centers in Bahrain and Dubai — Amazon reportedly declares “hard down” status for multiple zones
Iranian strikes are taking out AWS servers in the region.
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Iranian strikes on AWS data centers in Bahrain and Dubai have disrupted services that the company declared multiple zones in the region to have “hard down” status, meaning the affected areas are completely unavailable. According to Big Technology, AWS issued an internal memo stating that operations in the two data centers have been disrupted and that it's working to migrate affected clients' workloads to other regions. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has conducted strikes against AWS sites in the Middle East since the start of the war in early March.
“These two regions continue to be impaired, and services should not expect to be operating with normal levels of redundancy and resiliency,” the internal memo said, according to Big Technology. “We are actively working to free and reserve as much capacity as possible in the region for customers, and services should be scaled to the minimal footprint required to support customer migration.”
The AWS sites in the Middle East each have three compute zones, with both data centers reporting “hard down” and “impaired but functioning” zones. More importantly, the company said in its internal communications, “We do not have a timeline for when DXB and BAH will return to normal operations.”
Article continues belowAmazon isn’t the only tech company that the ongoing conflict between the United States and Iran has directly hit. The Middle Eastern country has threatened to strike Nvidia, Microsoft, and others as early as the second week of March, after the alleged targeting of a Tehran bank that killed several employees. It has reiterated the threat at the start of April and even struck an Oracle data center later that week.
However, while damage to data centers in the Middle East is concerning for the region, the global tech industry has bigger concerns. The regional war has disrupted the flow of oil and its derivatives, especially those that go through the Strait of Hormuz. These include aluminum, helium, and LNG — all of which are crucial in the semiconductor supply chain. And even if the war ends today, the damage to infrastructure could mean it takes months or even years for supplies to return to pre-war levels.
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Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.
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GiinTak Seems a great way to draw the entire rest of the world into the conflict. Take down essential services, now everyone wants you taken out ASAP :PReply -
ejolson Back on topic, concentrating essential services for thousands of companies into hyperscale datacenters makes those datacenters into high-value targets, not just for kinetic weapons like drones and missiles but complicated digital supply chain, social engineering and cloud infrastructure hacking.Reply
In order to increase efficiency and convenience, many things we enjoy today are subject to multiple single-points-of-failure. In other words, even with the engineered redundancy and resilience, the current network of hyperscale datacenters concentrate so much into one point of failure, that focused attacks become a profitable undertaking for adversaries. -
Gururu I was surprised, not shocked I guess, to learn in recent Patel briefings that FBI and other government agencies actually purchase information gathered and stored in like data centers. I believe the government used to subpoena or issue warrants for this information. Now the companies are more than ever complicit.Reply -
PEnns Dammmmm. How many million expensive Nvidia GPUs were hurt in this war???Reply
This must be good news to Jen tho, right?? They will be buying new ones to replace them.
Which means, more pain for gamers and the drought will continue while Jen is busy producing the expensive stuff.....UGH. -
derekullo Reply
Nvidia's share price, $177, hasn't really changed since the beginning of the "excursion".PEnns said:Dammmmm. How many million expensive Nvidia GPUs were hurt in this war???
This must be good news to Jen tho, right?? They will be buying new ones to replace them.
Which means, more pain for gamers and the drought will continue while Jen is busy producing the expensive stuff.....UGH. -
LordVile Reply
I mean you do sign your rights away for data to be purchased or “shared” by third parties. Handy way around protections about law enforcement getting them for investigationsGururu said:I was surprised, not shocked I guess, to learn in recent Patel briefings that FBI and other government agencies actually purchase information gathered and stored in like data centers. I believe the government used to subpoena or issue warrants for this information. Now the companies are more than ever complicit. -
the timid wild one Reply
ok sounds good. 👍ejolson said:Back on topic, concentrating essential services for thousands of companies into hyperscale datacenters makes those datacenters into high-value targets, not just for kinetic weapons like drones and missiles but complicated digital supply chain, social engineering and cloud infrastructure hacking.
In order to increase efficiency and convenience, many things we enjoy today are subject to multiple single-points-of-failure. In other words, even with the engineered redundancy and resilience, the current network of hyperscale datacenters concentrate so much into one point of failure, that focused attacks become a profitable undertaking for adversaries.