Skip to content
OVistoaIntelligence index
AboutMethodologyPricingDocs
Sign inSign up
BREAKINGPerson found dead in car after it plows into health club in Portland, Oregon39 min ago
Top StoriesUnited StatesCanadaWorldPoliticsGeneralBusinessTechHealthAviationSportsArtificial IntelligencePublishers

Ars Technica

May 1, 2026

Photo shows the city landscape of Fujairah, United Arab Emirates in the foreground with high-rise buildings and other buildings, while a black tower of smoke rises in the background beyond some hills after an explosion in the industrial zone caused by debris after interception of an Iranian drone by air defense on March 5, 2026.
Ars Technicaby Jeremy Hsu·May 1, 2026

Amazon stuck with months of repairs after drone strikes on data centers

Political lean
OVistoa

Article-level news analysis, transparent scoring, and API tools for readers, publishers, and teams that need source context.

DMCA and copyright review

Copyright owners can submit notices, counter-notices, and source material concerns through the dedicated review flow.

Open DMCA review

Product

  • Home
  • Feed
  • Search
  • Topics
  • Saved

Platform

  • About
  • Methodology
  • Home
  • Search
  • Saved
  • Me
n/a
Source qualityn/a
Factual ration/a
Framingn/a

Amazon’s cloud customers will need to wait several more months before the US tech company can repair war-damaged data centers and restore normal operations in the Middle East. The announcement comes two months after Iranian drone strikes targeted three Amazon data centers in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain—meaning that full recovery from the cloud disruption could take nearly half a year in all. The Amazon Web Services (AWS) dashboard posted an April 30 update describing how its UAE and Bahrain cloud regions “suffered damage as a result of the conflict in the Middle East” and are unable to support customer applications. The update also said that “relevant billing operations are currently suspended while we restore normal operations” in a process that “is expected to take several months.” That wording suggests Amazon will continue to avoid billing AWS customers in the affected regions—ME-CENTRAL-1 and ME-SOUTH-1—after it initially waived all usage-related charges for March 2026 at an estimated cost of $150 million. AWS also “strongly” recommended that customers migrate resources to other cloud regions and rely on remote backups to restore any “inaccessible resources.” Some customers, such as the Dubai-based super app Careem—which offers ride-hailing, household services, and food and grocery

Read at Ars Technica

Lean: n/a · Source quality n/a · Factual vs opinion n/a.

Score signature

Political lean

Political leann/aSource qualityn/aFactual ration/aFramingn/a
  • Pricing
  • API docs
  • Publishers
  • Account

    • Sign in
    • Create account
    • Reader settings
    • API console

    Legal

    • Terms
    • Privacy
    • Security
    • DMCA

    © 2026 Vistoa. All rights reserved.

    Limited excerpts, attribution, analysis, and outbound publisher links remain core product boundaries.