According to Downdetector, more than 4 million incident reports were logged globally at the outage’s peak. Snapchat alone recorded over 22,000 user complaints, while Roblox surpassed 12,000.
AWS engineers later confirmed the disruption was not caused by a cyberattack. It was created by a technical fault that temporarily crippled server communication across regions. By mid-morning, AWS announced that “most requests should now be succeeding,” noting that the issue had been fully mitigated (Newsweek update).
Financial Platforms Hit Hard — But Funds Remain Safe
Among those affected were leading cryptocurrency and financial platforms:
- Coinbase users reported login failures and stalled transactions, but the company confirmed that all funds remained secure in offline cold storage wallets.
- Robinhood experienced API and trading disruptions, delaying stock and crypto transactions.
- Venmo and Chime faced transfer delays and app downtime.
- Even Lloyds Bank and Bank of Scotland saw temporary outages tied to AWS network instability.
A Coinbase spokesperson said, “While customers were temporarily unable to access their accounts, their assets were never at risk.”
The Broader Impact: From Crypto to Social Media and Gaming
Beyond finance, the outage rippled through virtually every sector:
- Social media: Reddit, Snapchat, and Signal all experienced downtime.
- Gaming: Roblox, Fortnite, and Clash Royale reported severe latency or outages.
- Telecom and Government: Vodafone, BT, and the UK’s HMRC tax authority also suffered disruptions.
- As one Reddit user posted, “It’s a reminder that the cloud isn’t some magical system — it’s just someone else’s computer, and sometimes, that computer crashes.”
The Bigger Picture: Centralization vs. Decentralization
Ironically, the AWS outage revealed how decentralized technologies like crypto still rely on centralized infrastructure for accessibility. Blockchain networks remained secure and operational — but exchanges, apps, and wallets went dark because their gateways are cloud-hosted.