February 15, 2008 9:45 AM PST

Amazon storage 'cloud' service goes dark, ruffles Web 2.0 feathers

Amazon.com Web Service's hosted storage service went down Friday morning, frustrating many Web site customers and refreshing concerns with the ballyhooed approach of cloud computing.

An online forum spiked with customer complaints Friday morning as some people found that content stored on Amazon's Simple Storage Service (S3) was unavailable or performed slowly.

The service was restored a few hours later, according to an Amazon technician. The first forum posting was timed at 5 a.m. PT, and the service was back up at just past 9 a.m.

Glitch hits Amazon Simple Storage Service.

(Credit: Amazon)

The glitch sent a ripple through the blogosphere as Web entrepreneurs, who are increasingly using Amazon's hosted computing services, pondered whether they needed a back-up plan or a more traditional hosting provider.

On the forum, some people complained about how the service glitch essentially put them out of business temporarily.

"My new sites hosts over 25,000 images on Amazon and I wake up to notice major issues this morning," wrote one customer. "The S3 service is great but this just proves you can't rely on it, this is a major issue especially since it's been down for so long."

That particular Web site operator managed to put an in-house back-up system online, a job which should be automated, according to the forum posting.

This isn't the first time Amazon has run into problems keeping its computing services running without fail.

But since launching the services, Amazon has aggressively wooed Web 2.0 start-ups as customers, many of which operate on the back of Amazon's computing infrastructure.

Photo-sharing site SmugMug, for example, said it has saved hundreds of thousands of dollars by unplugging its servers and storage gear and using Amazon's per-usage services.

Amazon said it will try to provide more technical detail on the problem, once it has been fully resolved.

John Anderson, co-founder of greeting card site SquidNote, said his customers were greeted with empty cards this morning and immediately started contacting the company. He said SquidNote's brand took a hit from the outage.

"Perhaps if AWS (Amazon Web Services) gets huge, these outages will more transparently reflect on their brand too. It might get easier for us to say, 'Hey, it's Amazon's fault...just go look at Twitter and all these other sites...see, they're down too,'" he said. "Until then, however, we just need to accept that using AWS involves a real risk to our own brand."

In another case, voting application provider PollDaddy was knocked offline for two or three hours today, which had a material impact on the company. (Disclosure: Webware will be using the Web site for its Webware 100 voting).

PollDaddy CEO David Lenehan was disappointed because S3 was pitched as bullet-proof. When the company's own servers had problems before they went to S3, the site was typically only down for a short time.

The bill from S3 won't be that much money--$4,000-$5,000--but Lenehan's confidence has been shaken. "We could get a couple of high-end servers ourselves for that," he said.

--with additional reporting from Webware.com's Rafe Needleman.

Originally posted at Webware
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 4 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Only one intelligent comment in the whole article
by thenet411 February 15, 2008 12:49 PM PST
"Until then, however, we just need to accept that using AWS involves a real risk to our own brand." The same is true for ANY host. Even if you host your site and services yourself, there is a real risk to your brand if it goes down. All the whiney brats that want to complain need to turn on their brains. If you run a web service, you have to make everything redundant if you want to survive. Unfortunately, a lot of the people "running" these sites are 20-something brats who feel they are entitled to everything. There goes the neighborhood.
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Some Control Still Needed
by bitnoid February 15, 2008 2:41 PM PST
This isn't at all surprising and shouldn't be to anyone. What is surprising is the reliance many "businesses" have on mission-critical infrastructure out in the ether. There's still a need for some level of premise-based storage so that customers still have some level of control. It needs to be high-performance, scalable, reliable and affordable. Software enabling the build of clustered storage on commodity servers like that offered by Caringo is something to consider. It may not be as cheap as S3 services, but it's more cost effective than what other provide and it gives me control.
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Coral Cache
by ahoier February 16, 2008 8:42 PM PST
Coral Cache could be a possibility, surely...? Another possibility could be imageshack during outages. There's really sooo many possibilities, but Coral Cache (http://wiki.coralcdn.org/wiki.php?n=Main.Servers) seems to be like a decent possibility for web servers....there's some extensive directions on their wiki as well, for setting up server-side settings to re-write links, etc.
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Amazon Service
by tshyres February 17, 2008 4:58 PM PST
I remember last year a number of companies we worked with were moving out of data centers and switching to Amazon. The price was (and is) very reasonable, however it obviously does have its draw-backs ie issues with reliability. Amazon seems to be a good service if your site doesn't require 24x7 up-time. The Staff at MondayDelivery.com
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