When Amazon Web Services (AWS) failed this morning, much of the Internet went dark and crypto was no exception.
Several major blockchains and trading platforms, including Coinbase, Robinhood, and some Ethereum Layer 2 networks, reported disruptions after AWS suffered an operational outage related to its DynamoDB database service.
According to Amazon’s status page, the issue started in the US-EAST-1 region and caused cascading slowdowns across 58 services worldwide.
The company explained:
“Based on our investigation, the issue appears to be related to DNS resolution of the DynamoDB API endpoint in US-EAST-1. We are working on multiple parallel paths to speed recovery. This issue also affects other AWS services in the US-EAST-1 region. Global services or features that rely on US-EAST-1 endpoints, such as IAM updates and tables DynamoDB Global, may also experience issues. “
As a result, Down Detector recorded outages across more than 50 platforms, from airlines and streaming sites to social apps like Snapchat and Signal.
This is notably Amazon’s second major outage this year, after the one in April.
Centralized cloud, decentralized consequences
AWS underpins much of the world’s internet infrastructure, providing cloud storage and computing power to hundreds of businesses that rely on its availability. In crypto, this dependence proves difficult to ignore.
Coinbase confirmed that the outage was temporarily limiting user access, but said its systems were recovering. Robinhood reported a similar service restoration.
Meanwhile, Base, Coinbase’s layer 2 Ethereum network, posted that the AWS outage affected its infrastructure and reduced its capacity.
Notably, blockchain infrastructure providers were also not spared from the outage.
Consensys-backed Infura, the backend service that connects crypto wallets like MetaMask to blockchains, said the disruption affected its users’ connection to Polygon, Optimism, Arbitrum, Linea, Base and Scroll.

Why does the AWS outage continue to affect crypto?
Given the magnitude of these impacts, Lefteris Karapetsas, founder of Rotkiapp, a privacy-focused portfolio tracker, said:
“The vision behind blockchain was a decentralized infrastructure, which we completely failed at.”
The reality is that the infrastructure of many blockchain networks still runs on centralized servers.
For context, data from Ethernodes shows that AWS hosts approximately 2,368 Ethereum execution layer nodes, which represents approximately 37% of the network total.


This means that a technical problem at the provider or even in one of its data centers can slow down entire ecosystems built on top of it.
Still, an AWS outage won’t shut down Ethereum, as other nodes hosted on competing clouds or on self-running hardware will continue to process transactions.
Nonetheless, this level of concentration highlights the extent to which “decentralized” crypto depends on centralized channels.
Despite the philosophical tension posed by this dependency, cloud hosting remains the easiest route for small crypto projects.
This is because running nodes internally requires expensive hardware, stable electricity, and bandwidth. These are resources that large data centers provide at scale.
This makes AWS cheaper, “reliable” and faster to deploy for start-ups.
However, this convenience trades resilience for efficiency, as over-reliance on a few cloud providers creates structural risk for the emerging sector.
Decentralized alternatives?
The outage reignited debate over the need for decentralized cloud computing systems that mimic the functionality of AWS but distribute storage and processing among independent participants.
Ahmad Shadid, CEO of O.XYZ, said CryptoSlate that such a transition will not be easy.
According to him:
“AWS has an incredible amount of data centers. If decentralized cloud computing providers want to compete, they need to have as many or more data centers… Is that even feasible? Where are you going to get the power from?”
While admitting that these decentralized solutions could “use consumer GPUs and other similar resources”.
However, he questioned how these platforms would “find enough consumer GPUs and other resources equivalent in computing power to the computing power that AWS provides to all of its customers.”
Nonetheless, crypto enthusiasts believe that projects like Filecoin and Arweave are promising because they are censorship-resistant and cost-effective options that align more closely with crypto philosophy.
Notably, crypto market data supports this narrative, with tokens tied to decentralized storage protocols being among the best performing assets over the past 24 hours, according to CryptoSlate data.