Iranian drone strikes damaged three Amazon Web Services sites in the Middle East, exposing how vulnerable cloud data centers are in conflict.
Opinion
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The $1 Billion Question: Can Hyperscalers Afford to Lose a Data Center to War in 2026?
A new era of warfare may have begun as Iranian drones strike Amazon Web Services data centers, forcing investors to rethink the geopolitical risks behind the AI boom.
Infrastructure underpinning digital services has been pulled into the conflict in the Middle East ...
The attacks were believed to be the first time data centers had been attacked with drones. It likely won’t be the last, ...
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Iranian drone strikes on Amazon data centers expose cloud industry’s vulnerability to conflict
Amazon Web Services (AWS) reports structural damage to data centers in the UAE and Bahrain following Iranian drone strikes, causing localized disruptions.
Amazon Web Services isn't merely a commercial entity for enterprises; it is a critical instrument of American state power.
Amazon.com (NasdaqGS:AMZN) experienced disruptions to its AWS data centers in the UAE and Bahrain after military drone strikes. The attacks caused structural damage and prolonged service outages, ...
Amazon Web Services confirmed that several of its data centers in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain were damaged after ...
Amazon has confirmed that three Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centers in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and one in Bahrain have been damaged by drone strikes, causing an extensive outage that is ...
The update introduces a unified operations layer designed to aggregate risk signals across cloud environments and help CISOs manage threats through a single security solution.
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