Noti.Group RSS Feed
  • Contact Us
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Noti Group Logo
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
Noti Group
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT

Amazon Web Services outage trolled as ‘rehearsal for the end of the internet’

in Business
Reading Time: 4 mins read
390 21
A A
0
Amazon Web Services outage trolled as 'rehearsal for the end of the internet'
137
SHARES
6.8k
VIEWS
ShareShareShareShareShare


An hours-long crash of Amazon Web Services sparked a wave of tongue-in-cheek, apocalyptic memes Monday as social media users coped with the disruption of major sites and apps around the world.

Posts on X, Reddit and more mocked the meltdown with viral images including Homer Simpson warning “The end is near,” the popular cartoon-dog meme once again declaring amid flames, “This is fine,” and clips asking, “What do we do now?”

While most services were back online within hours, the social-media reaction was relentless. Users joked that the collapse of their favorite apps was “the rehearsal for the end of the internet.”

Posts mocked the meltdown with viral images including Homer Simpson warning, “The end is near.” @marcuslayerx/X

Echoing the renowned yellow-dog meme, one user posted an image of panicked office workers insisting, “I’m fine … everything is fine.”

Others posted clips of users screaming into phones or mock-photos of engineers surrounded by yellow caution tape in server rooms.

The online mockery followed a disruption that began around 3 a.m. ET and rippled across banks, retailers and gaming platforms before Amazon engineers restored most systems shortly after 5:30 a.m., according to the company’s service-status page.

Amazon said the incident stemmed from an “operational issue” affecting multiple services “in the US-EAST-1 region,” with a massive data hub in Northern Virginia linked to the crash.

One meme showed a map of outage reports captioned “The Entire Internet — AWS US-EAST-1.” @ImNotTheWolf/X

In an update, the company reported “increased error rates and latencies for multiple AWS Services” and said engineers were “actively working on both mitigating the issue and fully understanding the root cause.”

By early morning, Amazon said most websites and apps relying on its cloud were working normally again while staff continued “to work through a backlog of queued requests.”

Another meme depicts X as a safe haven while other platforms are burning. @cb_doge/X

The two-hour outage left millions of users unable to log in to platforms including Roblox, Snapchat, Ring, Fortnite, Hulu, Venmo, Coinbase, WhatsApp, the Starbucks app and Microsoft 365.

The British government’s official website and online tax portal also went dark, as did McDonald’s ordering systems in some markets, according to reports.

A woman with wide eyes and a shocked expression says, “I’M FINE…EVERYTHING IS FINE.” @OmnipotentCEO/X

Screenshots posted to X showed AWS’ support account replying to waves of complaints as hashtags like #AWSdown and #internetcrash trended worldwide.

For many, the disruption served as a reminder that much of the modern web depends on a handful of cloud providers — Amazon, Microsoft and Google — whose outages can halt communication, commerce and entertainment within seconds.

Harry Halpin, chief executive of NymVPN, told the New York Times that the problem likely began with a technical glitch in one of Amazon’s main data centers.

Social-media users flooded X, Reddit and TikTok with memes Monday. @tomipoint/X

But, he added, the company’s systems are inherently opaque, making it impossible to know the cause unless Amazon disclosed it, according to the Times.

“If your entire nation’s infrastructure relies on a few providers, all in the United States, and anything can go down at any moment, either for malicious reasons or just technical errors, that’s an exceedingly dangerous situation,” Halpin was quoted as saying.

Another meme depicted Amazon technicians as clueless while trying to repair the glitch. @CamKapHD/X

Amazon has not indicated that the breakdown was caused by a cyberattack. The company said engineers are reviewing logs to determine what triggered the failure.

A cartoon dog calmly sipping coffee in a burning room captioned “This is fine.” @marcuslayerx/X

Monday’s disruption echoed previous incidents in which faults inside major cloud or security firms cascaded across the internet.

In July 2024, a faulty update from cybersecurity vendor CrowdStrike caused a daylong global outage that grounded airlines and disrupted hospitals and governments.

AWS, which supplies hosting power to thousands of companies worldwide, generates roughly 20% of Amazon’s total sales and about 60% of its operating profit, according to company filings.

Despite the chaos, Amazon shares were little changed in early trading Monday as markets opened, signaling investors saw the glitch as temporary.

[Notigroup Newsroom in collaboration with other media outlets, with information from the following sources]

Tags: AmazonBusinessinternetinternet trollsSocial MediaTechX (formerly Twitter)
Previous Post

Bet $5, get $300 in bonus bets if your bet wins for NBA Opening Week

Next Post

The Sims Mobile is shutting down next year

Related Posts

UK pushes up a law criminalizing deepfake nudes in response to Grok
Technology

Teens sue Elon Musk’s xAI over Grok’s AI-generated CSAM

March 16, 2026
Ecovacs’ Deebot X8 and X9 Pro Omni robovacs are nearly 50 percent off
Technology

Ecovacs’ Deebot X8 and X9 Pro Omni robovacs are nearly 50 percent off

March 16, 2026
Nvidia says China’s BYD and Geely will use its robotaxi platform
Technology

Nvidia says China’s BYD and Geely will use its robotaxi platform

March 16, 2026
Average age of NYC homeowner jumps to stunning new high -- as American dream more out of reach for young people
Business

Average age of NYC homeowner jumps to stunning new high — as American dream more out of reach for young people

March 16, 2026
Load More
Next Post
The Sims Mobile is shutting down next year

The Sims Mobile is shutting down next year

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Islanders provide some clarity on Semyon Varlamov
  • Venezuela tops Italy to earn date with USA in WBC final
  • Mark Vientos’ rough spring continues for Mets
  • Jamal Mashburn reveals how Rick Pitino guided St. John’s back to the national conversation: ‘Masterful’
  • Rangers resort to failed old form during loss to Kings in Artemi Panarin’s return

Recent Comments

  • Stefano on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Van Hens on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Ioannis K on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • Panagiotis Nikolaos on The Last Byzantine Medieval Town on Earth Is Being Destroyed, and It’s Too Late
  • John Miele on UK government suggests deleting files to save water

Noti Group All rights reserved

No Result
View All Result
Noti Group

What’s New Here

  • Islanders provide some clarity on Semyon Varlamov
  • Venezuela tops Italy to earn date with USA in WBC final
  • Mark Vientos’ rough spring continues for Mets

Topics to Cover!

  • Business (4,750)
  • Entertainment (1,862)
  • General News (326)
  • Health (327)
  • Investigative Journalism (11)
  • Lifestyle (4)
  • Sports (8,168)
  • Technology (6,079)
  • World News (1,336)
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • RSS
  • Contact News Room
  • Code of Conduct
  • Careers
  • Values
  • Advertise
  • DMCA

© 2025 - noti.group - All rights reserved - noti.group runs on 100% green energy.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment

© 2025 - noti.group - All rights reserved - noti.group runs on 100% green energy.