Motley Fool Money - AWS Goes AWOL: Are we Too Dependent on the Cloud?
Episode Date: October 20, 2025AWS goes down again. Is it time to re-assess risk in the cloud and AI-era, where so much of the digital assistance we get is housed someplace we can’t see and controlled by someone we don’t know? ... David Meier, Tom King, and Tim Beyers: - Discuss the failures that led to the AWS outage this morning and which companies are services were impacted as a result. - Debate whether companies have become too dependent on AWS and its peers, especially when virtually all the in-demand AI services we’re banking on are hosted in these clouds. - Play another game of Faker or Breaker with three companies impacted by the AWS outage. Don’t wait! Be sure to get to your local bookstore and pick up a copy of David’s Gardner’s new book — Rule Breaker Investing: How to Pick the Best Stocks of the Future and Build Lasting Wealth. It’s on shelves now; get it before it’s gone! Companies discussed: AMZN, LYFT, UBER, HOOD, COIN, RBLX Host: Tim Beyers Guests: David Meier, Tom King Producer: Anand Chokkavelu Engineer: Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We’re committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
WCH at AWS, we need to talk about computing in the cloud fools.
You're listening, probably full money.
Welcome, fools.
I'm your host, Tim Byers.
With me, our longtime fools, David Beyer, Tom King.
It's great to have you both here.
So, guys, just a few hours ago, we're recording on Monday morning,
Amazon Web Services suffered a pretty catastrophic outage in one of the eastern U.S. region.
and businesses that offer essential digital services have taken the hit here.
This isn't the first time we've seen AWS go down, and it's not going to be the last,
especially with the scale of the AI buildout of which AWS plays a pretty big part.
So quick reactions here first.
And Tom, I'll start with you.
Are you at all surprised by this news?
Why or why not?
I'm not.
You know, this is a complicated system, and in a complicated system,
system, little things can compound. So it's almost inevitable that something like this would happen.
It's very similar to what happened with CrowdStrike last year. Remember when CrowdStrike caused
that big outage? You know, it recovered from that. It got on. It was, it is the cost of how things
are these days. Yeah. I mean, that's a fair point. I mean, these things are made up of like those,
you know, we've seen these commercials before, Dave, where you have the dominoes all lined up and you hit
one of those dominoes and they all start falling. What's your reaction to this? To be frank,
I'm surprised it's not happening more. Really, really think about this. This was an outage.
Something bad happened. It was an outage for a few hours. It's slowly, everything's getting
back online. Everything's back up and running. This is a massive system. The fact that it has
the reliability that it does is an engineering marvel. So, yeah, like, I get it. It's disappointing.
Thank goodness it happened at 3 a.m. Eastern time, right? I mean, I don't know exactly how much
traffic is flowing through there. I remember in my backyard in Northern Virginia, 35% of the
world's internet traffic used to flow through my backyard at peak times. So I'm not surprised,
but quite frankly, I'm impressed how quickly they recovered it.
And I'm surprised it doesn't happen more.
Maybe it does and we just don't feel it.
I don't know if there is a Jeff Bezos shakeshead approvingly meme,
but I think you'd be getting that right now, Dave.
I mean, it is interesting.
So let's talk about this.
AWS going dark again.
This has happened many times.
Here's what we know.
AWS, like you said, Dave, went offline around 3 a.m.
Eastern Time for what appears to have been a couple of hours. The rolling effects could continue,
and we are recording this on a platform called Riverside, and as soon as I logged in, we got a
nice little notice from Riverside saying, hey, AWS went down and services may be affected. I'm
paraphrasing there. So lots of companies have been affected here. At issue were some errors in the company's
DynamoDB database. So let me just briefly explain what this is. Amazon's primary database is
DynamoDB. It's a transactional database, and it's most famous for being the homegrown Amazon
database that they use, really, to process transactions. So this is meant to be a highly resilient,
highly replicated database throughout the Amazon and the Amazon Web Services ecosystem. This is what
they've built their business on. And what it was subject to, we don't know if it was an attack or
just an error. It was subject to an outage in the DNS system, the domain name server system.
When that happens, when the DNS goes out, and you probably have heard of this, like a distributed
denial of service attack, that's meant to attack the DNS. And if you do that, if you take down
the DNS, it's like you having your phone and suddenly all your contacts, like you can't press
to call anybody because your contacts are frozen. Like the phone book in your phone just no longer
works. You can't call anybody. That's what, when the DNS is down, that's what happens.
The DNS determines when you say Google.com, there's an underlying IP address that's a serious
of numbers and it translates Google.com to those numbers. And when that's down, you can't do that,
which means the internet just stops functioning. So this appears to be what happened here. I'm
kind of curious because the affected companies include Coinbase, Robin Hood, Roblox, a bunch of others.
Two questions from me. I'll start with you this time, Dave.
You said effectively, you're surprised this isn't happening more, but I'd like to gauge your concerns.
Are you at all concerned with how much influence AWS has over modern compute?
And are we creating any kind of single point of failure here?
So the answer is yes, there is concern.
I don't know how much I should be concerned, though, because this is the direction that everything
is going. Many years ago, I was talking with some folks, and I'm like, when the internet came up,
we are always going to be going more digital, not more analog. Okay? And, you know, AWS, Azure, Google
computing platform, you know, GCP, right? They all sprung up and they all provide these types
of services. So I don't think we're going to a single point of failure, right?
There's not going to be one company that always does everything for everyone.
But we don't have nearly as many companies doing this as when the internet was first being
created, right?
There aren't as many IP companies, things like that.
So I don't know.
Like I said, it's kind of one of those things where it's sort of the cost of doing business.
If you're not going to own your own hardware and manage your own hardware, you're essentially
paying for the risk of someone else having an issue and your business being affected.
Yeah. I mean, Tom, I'm curious how you think about this, because this is an issue, right?
Digital businesses need to have that digital infrastructure to do business, and that infrastructure
is now largely outsourced. So how do you think about this?
It is one of the downsides that we must live with.
We gained many advantages from the cloud providers, and this is one of the downsides.
If one of them breaks, they have a large impact on a lot of people.
I'm sure you guys remember, you've been around long enough to remember the days when you would have cold rooms in your office building that were stacked with computing equipment to deliver.
your website and the things that you sold over the internet.
We don't have those anymore.
We outsource that to Google or Microsoft or Amazon.
And we don't have to worry about keeping it working or keeping the equipment cold.
Yes, it's one of the disadvantages of our current system,
but we've gained many other advantages, I think is the way to think about it.
I love that you called server rooms, cold rooms.
Like, as it, I've, I've been in many.
I grew up, when I lived in Africa, you would go into the server room to cool down because of one of the cold, one of the only cold rooms in the, in the office building.
Nice.
Okay.
I love that you called it that because, like, you go into a server room and, yes, it's intending to be cold.
Get too close to a server.
You stop being cold real fast.
Like, they run really hot.
But I love that you called them that.
Let's talk about risk here, though, Tom, because I think you're both right.
So let's call this the cost of doing business.
But how would you assess risk?
Because AI is here.
The AI buildout is going to continue.
And it's going to largely depend on these cloud infrastructure companies.
quite a lot of them. They are going to be the ones that are going to do the most. Let's call it
GPU hoarding. They're going to do the most GPU hoarding. They are going to provide the infrastructure.
And when the digital assistance you need is how someplace else that we can't see and is controlled
by somebody else, how should we think about companies like Coinbase, Robin Hood, and Roblox?
do they need to be valued with a higher risk premium because of their dependence on something like
AWS? Tom, I'll go to you first on this. I don't think so. I think that companies will take
the option that costs them the least, both in terms of money and time and headaches and so on.
So if you really care about resiliency of always having your services available over the internet,
you would invest the money and the time and everything else to have your own servers.
The reason they choose to go with one of the cloud providers is because they gain many different
advantages. It's probably cheaper for them. It's less work for them. It expands to full the needs.
There is no limit to how much demand their service can supply so that you don't have, you know,
There's no limit on the hardware.
Amazon handles that problem or Google or Microsoft.
So I think company is always going to make the decision,
make a decision that is best for them in their own unique circumstances.
So no, I don't think that any kind of a additional risk needs to be considered here.
Dave, what do you think?
I agree with what Tom was saying.
I don't think there's any additional risk premium that's needed.
And part of the reason is there's actually a market, right, that's determining where people
will spend their money.
We don't have a single point of failure, right?
This isn't a monopoly.
And if these incidents these incidences grew in frequency, what would happen?
People would switch.
Yeah.
Right?
So there's actually a massive incentive for these companies to make sure.
that the systems are reliable. And again, it happened early in the morning. There was an immediate
response. It actually got back online pretty quickly. If it was that serious, right? They responded
quickly. And I'm sure that they've learned. We'll see what happens going forward. But I actually
think the market is what controls the risk. I realize it would be a pain to switch,
but there are switching. There are options available for substitution. And there are companies
that are switching. All right. Up next, we're going to talk about some fakers and some breakers.
It's the faker or breaker game. You're listening to Motley Full Money.
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to Motley Fool Money. We have a wide range of companies that were affected by the AWS outage today.
Let's talk about three guys. We're going to talk about three and let's get your take on them.
are these AWS dependent businesses fakers or are they breakers? And as a reminder, a faker is a company
that shows outstanding growth for a brief but unsustainable period of time. They look good enough.
They look enough like breakers to small eff fool some investors. So, Tom, coming to you first here.
Faker or breaker, Coinbase.
I would probably say faker because, you know, it's heavily dependent on the level of speculative
activity in the markets, which goes up and goes down.
And when it goes down, it really, really hurts the people that are involved.
So I would say faker.
Okay.
I mean, this is an interesting one because the crypto markets are getting more and more real,
more and more interesting.
thing. There is more real dollars flowing in particular into Bitcoin. However, this is probably
one of the most rampant areas for fraud. And with that, I'm going to give you number two here,
Dave, because it's a related company, Robin Hood, which has made a lot of money on orchestrating
crypto. So faker or breaker, Robin Hood.
So Robin Hood is not for me as an investor. Okay. All right. I'm a lot. I'm not for me as an investor.
Okay. All right.
I like you that you're qualifying already, but keep going.
Well, we work for the Motley Fool.
We tend to think about things differently, right?
Robin Hood is a type of competitor.
I will say that this is still a breaker.
The reason is because you do have founders who had their vision.
They knew what they wanted to do, and they were executing on it.
The other thing is, they're serving a big market and one that's growing.
The other thing, in order to serve those markets, they continue to bring new products
and services. They have some sort of ability that they seem to be turning into an advantage
to know, hey, this is what our consumers want. So, more people are coming, more people
are staying engaged. And yes, whether it was free trades or now it's crypto or now it's
prediction markets, again, not for me. But that's a very, it's free trades. But that's a lot of it.
That's okay. There's a lot of companies out there that don't serve me, but I see this company
as having a lot of the traits of a rule breaker. Okay. I'm going to bring up the third one,
and I'm going to ask you both for a super quick take on this, because I think it's a company,
you know, some of it, maybe two of us. I know I'm going to be using this company later this
week in order to go to Fool Fest in D.C. And that is Lyft. So faker or breaker, Tom, lift.
the not Uber
Uber look alike.
Yeah, so Lyft is pretty much
concentrated in the United States.
Uber took the global expansion option.
I think that Uber's size
gives it certain advantages over Lyft.
I know from being a regular
or at least until a few years ago
a regular user of both
that Uber was always cheaper
and always quicker to get to you.
They also probably lose more
money than Lyft or were back then
at the time. I mean, I think
it's hard to say, but I mean, there has to be a lift because Uber can't have this in a market entirely to itself.
Then we'd really be in trouble.
Is what you're saying.
It passes the COLA test.
It is the Pepsi to Uber.
It does.
Yes, it is.
Yes.
So does that make it a breaker for you?
Or does it make it or is it still not enough?
It's still not enough, but I think it's an important company.
It has to exist to compete with Uber.
All right.
Last word, Dave.
Faker or breaker?
Faker is hard, but I have to push in that direction.
It's interesting.
If I remember my history correctly, Lyft started before Uber.
I don't know.
But I think that's correct.
I think it was called Zimcar, and then it morphed, and then Lyft was created out of Zimcar.
But it got usurped by Uber.
Uber just went on a, you know, we're going to gobble up the world.
we're going to take this market share strategy. And Uber has done a good job of rebounding,
but I don't see it as something that can really take serious market share going forward.
It'll still grow. It still provides an excellent service. It's the one I go to. I don't go to Uber.
But no, I don't think I can call it a rule breaker. But faker is tough. Faker is harsh, in my opinion.
It's just a game, Dave. You've got to make a call.
I'm going with faker. No, I'm going with faker. But I'm just,
but I'm just, I'm giving you the little caveat.
All right, fair enough.
Up next, we preview tomorrow.
There's some interesting stuff happening.
Speaking of prediction markets, there's your hint.
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All right.
Back with a preview for tomorrow.
You will have Emily Flip and San Mateo and Jason Hall talking about prediction markets.
What are they?
How are they approved with regulators?
How much money is flowing through them now?
And how can you invest with them?
So if prediction markets are a legitimate market opportunity, are they based on skill?
is it just another form of gambling?
This is everything you're going to hear from Emily Sandmeet and Jason tomorrow.
But for today, I think we've concluded here, guys, that AWS, massive, down today for a little period of time, probably going to be down again in the future.
Doesn't mean that this is one that we should get too overhyped about, but a little bit annoying.
But that's it for today.
Thanks to David Meyer and Tom King for joining me today, guys. As always, people on the program may have interests and the stocks they talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool.
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please check out our show notes. That's it for Motley Fool Money today. Again, please be sure you
tune in for Emily Sandmeet and Jason tomorrow for Dave Meyer and Tom King for our engineer, Dan Boyd,
and our producer, Anna Chuck Ballou, and Tim Byers. You've been listening to Motley Full Money. Thanks.
See you soon, Fools. Pull on.
