The outage that hit Amazon’s cloud computing platform, impacting major cryptocurrency exchanges, is a ‘textbook example’ of the shortcomings of centralized systems, experts say.
On April 15, major crypto exchanges Binance, KuCoin, and others suffered temporary network interruptions, forcing the platforms to briefly halt withdrawals for users.
The move followed an outage that hit Amazon Web Services, a cloud computing provider by Amazon that serves a large portion of the global market with services such as storage and computing power. Businesses rely on AWS data centers for running websites and applications.
If there’s an outage, the impact can be massive — and crypto felt part of this as global exchanges moved to briefly halt a key service. AWS disruptions are the reason crypto needs decentralized systems, including artificial intelligence-powered decentralized cloud infrastructure.
“AWS’s outage today is a textbook example of the single point of failure risk that comes with centralized cloud infrastructure. It’s a reminder of why demand is growing for more distributed and resilient models,” said Dr. Max Li, founder & chief executive officer of OORT, a cloud for decentralized AI platform.
Li contends that decentralized cloud computing platforms still face notable challenges, including network coordination, latency, and scalability. However, they mitigate the ‘single point of failure’ risk by tapping into the benefits of blockchain.
“Decentralized cloud computing provides a compelling alternative by distributing data and processing across a network, effectively mitigating the risk of total service disruption,” he noted. “While centralized cloud infrastructure will likely maintain its significance, the importance of decentralized computing is becoming increasingly evident.”
Binance reopened withdrawals for its users in under ten minutes, shortly after the network disabled them. However, as the exchange noted, customers still faced issues placing trades.
With the problem also impacting crypto wallets and on-chain analytics tools, experts reacting to the event say crypto and web3 can do better.
That’s an opinion Jonathan Schemoul, CEO of Aleph Cloud, shared in a statement sent to crypto.news. Aleph Cloud is a decentralized cloud infrastructure provider offering virtual machines, web hosting, and other backend services.
Schemoul stated:
“What we’re witnessing here is further proof that many crypto and Web3 companies don’t act in the true interest of their users. They promote decentralization and privacy, yet continue to depend on big tech, despite higher costs and single points of failure”.
Experts have long contended that centralized cloud services like Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud are major providers. However, massive costs and other limitations often become barriers that keep crypto startups in innovation limbo.