StatusCake

downtime

AWS today suffered another serious span of downtime for a large degree of AWS customers (EC2, S3, etc!). The downtime lasted around 35 minutes meaning thousands of websites were knocked offline. If you host your website on one of the Amazon services and didn’t notice this downtime then maybe it’s time to setup website monitoring?

So what can you do when AWS goes down – after all it’s outside of your control isn’t it? Partly yes – you could have backups in place and switch over to another server but realistically one of the best routes you can take when AWS goes down is to let your customers know you are aware of the issue.

People are understanding of downtime as long as they are kept informed. If your site or application goes down because of an AWS failure the first thing you should do is get onto social networks look reactive. Let people know what the cause of the issue is and if possible give a rough estimate of how long you expect it to be down for.

Protecting your brand through downtime is easy but you need to be one of the first people to find out about the downtime – you don’t want to seem slow to react or even worse unaware of downtime caused by AWS. There is a huge range of website monitoring services you can use to ensure you get alerted quickly and effortlessly, for example our service(which you can use for free!)

Share this

More from StatusCake

Blog

Beyond Uptime: Building a Self-Healing OpenClaw Observability Stack

3 min read The allure of OpenClaw is undeniable. You deploy a highly autonomous, self-hosted AI agent, give it access to your repositories and inboxes, and watch it reason through complex workflows while you sleep. It is the dream of the ultimate 10x developer tool realized. But as any veteran DevOps engineer will tell you: running an LLM-backed

When AWS us-east-1 Fails, Much of the Internet Fails With It

7 min read There are cloud outages, and then there are us-east-1 outages. That distinction matters because failures in AWS’s Northern Virginia region rarely feel like ordinary regional incidents. They tend instead to expose something larger and more uncomfortable: too much of the modern internet still behaves as though one place is an acceptable concentration point for infrastructure,

In the Age of AI, Operational Memory Matters Most During Incidents

7 min read Artificial intelligence is making software easier to produce. That much is already obvious. Code that once took hours to scaffold can now be drafted in minutes. Boilerplate, integration logic, tests, refactors and small internal tools can be generated with startling speed. In some cases, even substantial pieces of implementation can be assembled quickly enough to

AI Didn’t Kill the SDLC. It Made It Harder to See

10 min read Whilst AI has compressed the visible stages of software delivery; requirements, validation, review and release discipline have not disappeared. They have been pushed into automation, runtime and governance. The real risk is not that the lifecycle is dead, but that organisations start acting as if accountability died with it. There is a now-familiar story about

When Code Becomes Cheap: The New Reliability Constraint in Software Engineering

4 min read How AI Is Shifting Software Engineering’s Primary Constraint For most of the history of software engineering, the primary constraint was production. Code was expensive, skilled engineers were scarce, and shipping features required concentrated human effort. Velocity was limited by how fast people could reason, implement, test, and deploy. That constraint shaped everything from team size,

Want to know how much website downtime costs, and the impact it can have on your business?

Find out everything you need to know in our new uptime monitoring whitepaper 2021

*By providing your email address, you agree to our privacy policy and to receive marketing communications from StatusCake.