Iranian drone strikes damaged three Amazon Web Services sites in the Middle East, exposing how vulnerable cloud data centers are in conflict.
Amazon said on Monday some of ​its data centers in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain were damaged by drone strikes in the ...
The disrupted AWS regions highlight tech's growth and increased vulnerability in the Middle East, where Amazon currently has three geographic regions spread between Bahrain, the UAE and Israel. All of ...
Two of ME-CENTRAL-1's three availability zones went offline after Iran targeted Amazon's cloud infrastructure.
March 1 (Reuters) - Amazon's cloud unit, AWS, said on Sunday that power to its data center in the United Arab Emirates was ...
Amazon said the Bahrain facility was damaged due to a nearby drone strike, and two data centers in the UAE were directly hit ...
The company did not have an estimated time for when power would be restored to the data center. Read more at straitstimes.com ...
Amazon AWS data centers in UAE and Bahrain hit by drone strikes amid US-Iran tensions, causing power and infrastructure disruptions.
It is the latest commitment from the tech company as it seeks to cash in on unrelenting demand for artificial intelligence.
The fire broke out on the same day Iranian projectiles struck the country in retaliation for US and Israeli strikes.
Amazon Web Services confirmed drone strikes hit facilities in the UAE and near Bahrain, impairing cloud operations and urging customers to activate backup plans.