It has been reported that Amazon Web Services (AWS) is experiencing another outage after a CloudFront issue began throwing 5xx errors, knocking a string of websites and online services offline across multiple regions.
Full story here: https://www.theregister.com/off-prem/2026/07/16/aws-cloudfront-outage-serves-errors-instead-of-websites/5272421
Commenting on this story is Mayur Upadhyaya, CEO of APIContext:
“The AWS CloudFront incident isn’t noteworthy because a critical cloud provider experienced an outage. Every infrastructure provider will have operational incidents. The more concerning trend is that we’re increasingly consolidating around a small number of providers because they’re the most convenient and economically attractive choice.That consolidation changes the nature of operational risk. A fault that might once have affected a handful of organizations can now impact thousands simultaneously because so many businesses depend on the same infrastructure.We’re seeing the same pattern across cloud platforms, identity providers, AI foundation models and DNS. As digital infrastructure centralizes, the blast radius of individual failures grows.This isn’t an argument against consolidation. The operational and economic benefits are enormous. But it does change the resilience conversation. Organisations need to understand not only whether a supplier is reliable, but how much of their business depends on that supplier, what the failure modes look like, and how critical workflows behave when those dependencies degrade. The question isn’t whether outages will happen. It’s whether your most important transactions continue to work when they do.”
Resillance has to be the number one game when it comes to keeping websites up. Because if you don’t service your customer, someone else will.
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This entry was posted on July 16, 2026 at 1:41 pm and is filed under Commentary with tags AWS, CloudFront. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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AWS CloudFront outage leaves websites unreachable for users
It has been reported that Amazon Web Services (AWS) is experiencing another outage after a CloudFront issue began throwing 5xx errors, knocking a string of websites and online services offline across multiple regions.
Full story here: https://www.theregister.com/off-prem/2026/07/16/aws-cloudfront-outage-serves-errors-instead-of-websites/5272421
Commenting on this story is Mayur Upadhyaya, CEO of APIContext:
“The AWS CloudFront incident isn’t noteworthy because a critical cloud provider experienced an outage. Every infrastructure provider will have operational incidents. The more concerning trend is that we’re increasingly consolidating around a small number of providers because they’re the most convenient and economically attractive choice.That consolidation changes the nature of operational risk. A fault that might once have affected a handful of organizations can now impact thousands simultaneously because so many businesses depend on the same infrastructure.We’re seeing the same pattern across cloud platforms, identity providers, AI foundation models and DNS. As digital infrastructure centralizes, the blast radius of individual failures grows.This isn’t an argument against consolidation. The operational and economic benefits are enormous. But it does change the resilience conversation. Organisations need to understand not only whether a supplier is reliable, but how much of their business depends on that supplier, what the failure modes look like, and how critical workflows behave when those dependencies degrade. The question isn’t whether outages will happen. It’s whether your most important transactions continue to work when they do.”
Resillance has to be the number one game when it comes to keeping websites up. Because if you don’t service your customer, someone else will.
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This entry was posted on July 16, 2026 at 1:41 pm and is filed under Commentary with tags AWS, CloudFront. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.