Amazon’s cloud division, Amazon Web Services (AWS), experienced two outages in December reportedly linked to its AI tools, according to the Financial Times.
Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN
The most notable incident occurred in mid-December when the company’s AI coding platform, Kiro, was used to implement system changes, inadvertently triggering a disruption that lasted roughly 13 hours. AWS confirmed the outages were limited to a single region in mainland China and emphasized that core services such as computing, storage, databases, and other AI offerings remained unaffected.
An AWS spokesperson clarified that the disruption was caused by user error, specifically misconfigured access controls, rather than a fundamental flaw in the underlying infrastructure. Despite the localized nature of the incident, the brief outages have sparked renewed discussions about the resilience of cloud services and the risks associated with heavily AI-driven operations.
This December event follows a much larger outage in October that had a global impact, affecting platforms such as Reddit, Roblox, and Snapchat. The earlier disruption originated with Amazon’s DynamoDB database service and Domain Name System (DNS) resolution issues, which act as the internet’s address book.
These initial failures cascaded across 141 other AWS services, briefly disrupting popular services like Disney+, Venmo, and Zoom.
While AWS issued early updates following the December outages, the company typically publishes detailed Post-Event Summaries only after fully investigating the root causes. Analysts suggest that while the latest incidents are relatively contained, they underscore the potential for systemic vulnerabilities within AWS’s vast cloud ecosystem.
Frequent cloud disruptions force companies to evaluate trade-offs between resilience and operational complexity. AWS continues to hold over 30% of the global cloud market, making it an attractive but potentially risky single-provider solution for many businesses. Some organizations have turned to multi-cloud strategies, maintaining a second provider as a backup to mitigate downtime.
However, multi-cloud setups introduce additional costs and operational challenges, including varying programming interfaces, security protocols, and the need for specialized staff training. As a result, some companies accept occasional outages rather than fully investing in redundant systems that are complex to manage in practice.
Following reports of the December outages, Amazon’s stock (AMZN) edged slightly lower, reflecting investor caution over the reliability of its cloud infrastructure. While the incidents were localized and caused no widespread service disruption, market observers note that recurring outages, especially those tied to AI tools, could influence investor sentiment in the medium term.
Experts emphasize that AWS remains a market leader with robust global reach, and occasional disruptions are unlikely to derail its dominant position. Nevertheless, these incidents highlight the growing importance of resilient cloud architectures and careful AI tool deployment, both for service providers and their clients.
The post Amazon (AMZN) Stock; Edges Slightly Lower as AI-Linked Cloud Outages Hit appeared first on CoinCentral.


