Will Jeff Bezos eat his own dog food?

Amazon S3 outage roils worldwide Web!


Technology trends and news by Steve Rosenbaum
July 21, 2008 | last edited July 22, 2008 | Comments (5)

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After yesterday’s seven-plus-hour outage of both the US and UK servers, users of Amazon S3 are waking up with some difficult questions to answer.

While Amazon itself doesn't suffer 'outages'  the S3 service has been down twice for significant periods of time in the past six months.  Users have counted on Amazon's reputation, a 99.999  SLA,  and engineered-in redundancy in using the service for 'in the cloud' storage and delivery of mission critical files. The relative ease of integration, the low cost,  and the widespread adoption of S3 by startups has given Amazon an early lead in the storage community.

Now - after a day of broken pages, failed uploads, and cascading site failures, webmasters are determining if Amazon plans to build a service that only works for sites with low reliability requirements and startup budgets.  Today, the broken sites include WordPress,  Huffington Post,  SmugMug, 37 Signals (Campfire,  Backpack),  CenterNetworks,  NASDAQ, Activision, Business Objects, Hasbro and Magnify.net are just some of the many sites and companies using Amazon’s S3 Web Services.

The impact of the outage was so significant that Fred Wilson, traveling with his family in Europe twittered yesterday: "When I got on line yesterday I thought the Web was slow, until I realized that S3 was down." Oh, yeah, Twitter uses S3 too, so they were impacted. (Vator.tv was affected as well)

Amazon needs to answer the following questions quickly - and significantly.  This can't be a press release. Jeff Bezos needs to publicly take responsibly  for this outage,  explain what happened, and clarify that Amazon expects to provide "Zero Defect" product to enterprise level customers.  Anything less will signal the beginning of a defection of major customers from S3 to more expensive,  but more reliable alternatives.

1.  What happened.
The outage happened Sunday Morning at 9am PST,  which looks more like a maintenance window than a time of high customer demand.   Was this a self inflicted wound? We need to know.

2.  Why won't it happen again?
It seems like there are some fundamental engineering issues with the service that make their promises of redundancy ineffective.

3.  Why doesn't, and when will Amazon.com be reliant on S3 for its cloud computing /storage needs?

4.  Is Amazon committed to powering web infrastructure? Simply put, is this a business or a hobby?

All of these questions come down to this:  Will Jeff Bezo's eat his own dogfood?  It's not a simple question.  Someone needs to take ownership of the S3 business, clarify its commitment to customers, and layout a roadmap for the evolution of the product from start up haven to serious business computing platform.  To do any less will signal to serious users that its time to look for other solutions and platforms.  All of the hard work and innovation that Amazon has provided will quickly evaporate if they can't grow the service to meet the needs of their now deeply integrated customers.

This is a critical time for both S3 and the cloud computing movement. To call it anything less is to let the opportunity for leadership slip away.


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5 comments

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Gary Silver
Gary Silver, 28 days ago
http://tinyurl.com/5nmoo8

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Matthias Schwarz
Matthias Schwarz, 29 days ago
Amen. In addition to raising the confidence level of S3 users by taking a dose of its own medicine and running a significant portion of Amazon's web presence using the same infrastructure, one can only hope that users will demand compliance with the SLA violation clauses. After all, we're not talking some "free" Google gadget here but a service with a price, no matter how cheap or expensive. Basic math tells me that availability for July 2008 was below 99% for virtually all S3 subscribers, and while the promised 25% service credit is not a big chunk of cash in the bank for the SMBs taking advantage of a valuable and nicely priced product it will hopefully dent S3's August revenue significantly enough in aggregate to stir up some dust at Amazon's headquarters.

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Cosme Sevestre
Cosme Sevestre, 29 days ago
I have been wondering about question #3 for some time now. Using Amazon S3 on EC2 instances is not straight forward and more importantly not part of the basic Amazon configuration. I guess the EC2 team has good reasons to hold back for the time being... Vator.tv was indeed impacted by the outage, part of VatorNews working only thanks to our CDN.

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Josh Chandler
Josh Chandler, 29 days ago
And the question being is Jeff Bezos's focus on investing in small businesses really affecting his own, this service is powering so many of the small businesses he is investing in (ahem Twitter). So that cant look good!

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Bambi Francisco
Bambi Francisco, 29 days ago
Excellent piece! The Amazon S3 outage certainly affected our service on Sunday.

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