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A large chunk of the internet dropped offline on Thursday. Some of the most popular sites, apps and services on the internet were down, including UPS and FedEx (which have since come back online ...
AWS, Amazon’s internet infrastructure service that is the backbone of many websites and apps, has been experiencing a major outage affecting a big chunk of the internet. Affected services ...
A picture shows the logo of the online retailer Amazon dispalyed on computer screens in London in 2014. (LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images) By Meg Wagner One errant keystroke to blame It turns out that ...
Large chunks of the internet were offline starting shortly before 6:00 a.m. ET on Tuesday, including everything from CNN to the British government, in an outage being blamed on Fastly, ...
All this is to say that, through all those countless Terms & Conditions and third-party consent forms, Automattic potentially has access to a huge chunk of the internet’s content and data.
On Tuesday morning, an Amazon team was investigating a problem that was slowing down the S3billing system. At 9:37 am Pacific time, one of the team members executed a command that was meant to ...
Articles and videos about How a typo took down a huge chunk of the internet on FOX6 News Milwaukee.
By Meg Wagner One errant keystroke to blame It turns out that it was a simple typo that caused the Tuesday internet meltdown that affected thousands of websites. Amazon’s Simple Storage Service ...
WordPress supports around 43 percent of the internet you're most likely to see. You probably don’t know about Automattic, but they know you. As the parent company of WordPress, its content ...
Amazon’s Simple Storage Service (S3) — a cloud storage provider dubbed the backbone of the internet because more than 150,000 websites, including giants like Netflix and Pinterest, […] ...
It turns out that it was a simple typo that caused the Tuesday internet meltdown that affected thousands of websites. Amazon’s Simple Storage Service (S3) — a cloud storage provider dubbed the ...
By Meg Wagner One errant keystroke to blame It turns out that it was a simple typo that caused the Tuesday internet meltdown that affected thousands of websites. Amazon’s Simple Storage Service ...