Search
  • Videos
  • 5G
  • Windows 10
  • Cloud
  • Innovation
  • Security
  • Tech Pro
  • more
    • Apple
    • ZDNet Academy
    • Microsoft
    • Mobility
    • Hardware
    • Executive Guides
    • Best VPN Services
    • See All Topics
    • White Papers
    • Downloads
    • Reviews
    • Galleries
    • Videos
    • TechRepublic Forums
  • Newsletters
  • All Writers
    • Log In to ZDNET
    • Join ZDNet
    • About ZDNet
    • Preferences
    • Community
    • Newsletters
    • Log Out
  • Menu
    • Videos
    • 5G
    • Windows 10
    • Cloud
    • Innovation
    • Security
    • Tech Pro
    • Apple
    • ZDNet Academy
    • Microsoft
    • Mobility
    • Hardware
    • Executive Guides
    • Best VPN Services
    • See All Topics
    • White Papers
    • Downloads
    • Reviews
    • Galleries
    • Videos
    • TechRepublic Forums
      • Log In to ZDNET
      • Join ZDNet
      • About ZDNet
      • Preferences
      • Community
      • Newsletters
      • Log Out
  • us
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • India
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
    • ZDNet around the globe:
    • ZDNet China
    • ZDNet France
    • ZDNet Germany
    • ZDNet Korea
    • ZDNet Japan

The 10 scariest cloud outages (and lessons learned from them)

19 of 20 NEXT PREV
  • T-Mobile Sidekick shutdown, 2009

    T-Mobile Sidekick shutdown, 2009

    Think cloud outages can't be terrifying? You haven't been paying attention. Happy Halloween, everybody ...

    In fall 2009, a server failure at Microsoft caused big problems for T-Mobile Sidekick phone owners: They were unable to access their email, calendar info, contacts, and personal data stored in the cloud for a week.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Phil Ramey/RameyPix/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from T-Mobile

    Lessons learned from T-Mobile

    Lessons Learned: If you have important data in the cloud you can't afford to lose, it's worth your time to make a local backup for safekeeping.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: CNET

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Yahoo! Mail outage, 2013

    Yahoo! Mail outage, 2013

    When Yahoo! Mail underwent a major redesign in October 2013, a some users reported that mail items appeared to be missing from their accounts. Ultimately, in December 2013, Yahoo! admitted that there was a failure in 1 percent of its email accounts -- affecting approximately 1,000,000 people -- with some emails going undelivered for weeks or months.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Helen King/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from Yahoo!

    Lessons learned from Yahoo!

    Lessons Learned:A major frustration in this outage was a lack of communication. Yahoo! attempted to minimize the appearance of the disaster when discussing it publicly, while CEO Marissa Mayer was criticized for staying silent.

    When there's an outage companies and executives need to be in front of it.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Ruben Sprich/Reuters/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Hurricane Sandy, 2012

    Hurricane Sandy, 2012

    Hurricane Sandy caused lengthy power outages and extensive flooding in the New York City area, taking a number of servers offline in the region. This caused major websites to fail, including The Huffington Post, BuzzFeed, and Gawker.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Keith Bedford/Reuters/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from Sandy

    Lessons learned from Sandy

    Lessons Learned: Many backup generators failed during Hurricane Sandy because they were submerged in water; others failed when liquid fuel reserves ran out. Having a robust plan for continued operations through natural disasters is critical.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Richard Levine/Demotix/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Amazon Cloud Services outage, 2015

    Amazon Cloud Services outage, 2015

    In September 2015, Amazon Cloud Services servers failed when they were overloaded with metadata requests from a new DynamoDB feature. As a result, many popular apps and websites (Reddit, Tinder, Netflix, IMDB) were offline for seven hours.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Iain Masterton/incamerastock/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from Amazon

    Lessons learned from Amazon

    Lessons Learned: Most Amazon clients were caught unprepared for the outage, but not Netflix. That's because the streaming site uses "chaos engineering" to simulate disruptions, preparing itself for the worst.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • PayPal, 2009

    PayPal, 2009

    In 2009, PayPal experienced a worldwide system outage for approximately five hours. The company handled $2,000 in online commerce every second at the time, suggesting the event interfered with $36 million worth of personal and business transactions.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Yuriko K Nakao/Reuters/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from PayPal

    Lessons learned from PayPal

    Lessons Learned: Mobile payment systems can and do fail. Businesses should support multiple payment systems where possible to give customers options during an outage.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: David Shopper/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • GoDaddy, 2012

    GoDaddy, 2012

    Initially thought to be the work of an Anonymous-connected hacker, a sizable outage struck web services provider GoDaddy in 2012. The outagee was due to corrupted router table data. Service was down for six hours, putting countless websites and email inboxes out of commission.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: ASP/Cal Sport Media/Zumapress.com

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from GoDaddy

    Lessons learned from GoDaddy

    Lessons Learned: GoDaddy was criticized for having poor infrastructure, poor support and poor communications throughout the crisis. If you have business-critical data in the cloud, it is imperative that you choose your provider wisely.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Hiya Images/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Food Stamps/SNAP, 2013

    Food Stamps/SNAP, 2013

    A power outage at a Xerox Corp. data center wrecked havoc on America's food stamp program in 17 states for more than 11 hours, removing the spending limits from SNAP EBT cards.

    This led to supermarket shelves being "decimated" as shoppers piled their carts full of groceries. Other supermarkets stopped accepting SNAP cards entirely.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Robin Nelson/Zumapress.com

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from SNAP

    Lessons learned from SNAP

    Lessons Learned: While relatively rare, long cloud outages can happen in crucial areas. It's important to have a game plan in place for dealing with these outages -- many stores simply turned away hungry customers, inciting panic.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Mike Segar/Reuters/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • NASDAQ failure, 2013

    NASDAQ failure, 2013

    On Aug. 22, 2013, a software bug in the NASDAQ backup servers caused a total failure, taking the stock exchange offline for more than three hours. When it came back online, traders rushed to sell shares of NASDAQ itself, pushing it 5 percent lower.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Rick Maiman/Sygma/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from NASDAQ

    Lessons learned from NASDAQ

    Lessons Learned: Shortly after the outage, NASDAQ proposed design changes to its Securities Information Processor, "including architectural improvements, information security, disaster recovery plans and capacity parameters."

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Steve Prezant/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Intuit Cloud outage, 2010

    Intuit Cloud outage, 2010

    In June 2010, power failures took down both the main and backup servers at financial services company Intuit (Quickbooks, TurboTax). Businesses lost access to their books for 36 hours. Making matters worse, a second failure occurred at Intuit less than a month later.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Mike Blake/Reuters/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from Intuit

    Lessons learned from Intuit

    Lessons Learned: If you need guaranteed, round-the-clock access to your important financial data, keep an offline copy.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Hotmail database error, 2010

    Hotmail database error, 2010

    At the end of 2010, Microsoft ran a script to delete a number of dummy Hotmail accounts the company had used for testing purposes. An error in the script instead deleted 17,000 legitimate accounts. Account recovery and service restoration took three days in most cases; longer in others.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: CNET

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

  • Lessons learned from Hotmail

    Lessons learned from Hotmail

    Lessons Learned: We all have our preferred email provider. To play it safe, however, it's worth maintaining an account with a second provider to maintain communications in case of emergency.

    Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

    Photo by: Imaginechina/Corbis

    Caption by: Fox Van Allen

19 of 20 NEXT PREV
  • T-Mobile Sidekick shutdown, 2009
  • Lessons learned from T-Mobile
  • Yahoo! Mail outage, 2013
  • Lessons learned from Yahoo!
  • Hurricane Sandy, 2012
  • Lessons learned from Sandy
  • Amazon Cloud Services outage, 2015
  • Lessons learned from Amazon
  • PayPal, 2009
  • Lessons learned from PayPal
  • GoDaddy, 2012
  • Lessons learned from GoDaddy
  • Food Stamps/SNAP, 2013
  • Lessons learned from SNAP
  • NASDAQ failure, 2013
  • Lessons learned from NASDAQ
  • Intuit Cloud outage, 2010
  • Lessons learned from Intuit
  • Hotmail database error, 2010
  • Lessons learned from Hotmail

With more businesses and applications moving data to the cloud, even small outages can be devastating. By studying the worst cloud fails, we can find clues to avoiding future problems.

Read More Read Less

Hotmail database error, 2010

At the end of 2010, Microsoft ran a script to delete a number of dummy Hotmail accounts the company had used for testing purposes. An error in the script instead deleted 17,000 legitimate accounts. Account recovery and service restoration took three days in most cases; longer in others.

Published: December 15, 2016 -- 17:06 GMT (09:06 PST)

Caption by: Fox Van Allen

19 of 20 NEXT PREV

Related Topics:

Digital Transformation Data Centers CXO Innovation Storage Cloud TV
LOG IN TO COMMENT
  • My Profile
  • Log Out
| Community Guidelines

Join Discussion

Add Your Comment
Add Your Comment

Related Galleries

  • 1 of 3
  • Create your own free Adobe Creative Cloud with free and open source software

    While Creative Cloud has its strong benefits, it's also costly. If you want to accomplish most of what you can with Creative Cloud, but pay absolutely nothing, these products can help. ...

  • Data center automation, IT skills, IoT and digital transformation: Research round-up

    Our analysis of the data that matters from the past month.

  • These rooms full of TVs are how Amazon gets Prime Video to look sharp on every device

    Photos: Amazon needs to test its video service across lots and lots (and lots) of TVs. Here's an inside look.

  • IT spending, smartwatches, AI and the cloud: Research round-up

    We tell the story of key technology trends from the past month.

  • How to turn your iPhone into a business workhorse: Add these apps and accessories, and tweak these settings

    Here's how, with a few tweaks and accessories, you can transform your iPhone into a business workhorse that will allow you to get serious work done.

  • The dumbest passwords people still use

    Everybody knows that 12345 is a bad password. But what they're using instead isn't much stronger

  • Cloud services: 24 lesser-known web services for your business to try

    In this guide, we've spotlighted 24 cloud-based services that can take your business to the next level. There's a huge world of opportunity and available resources beyond Google, ...

ZDNet
Connect with us

© 2019 CBS Interactive. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy | Cookies | Ad Choice | Advertise | Terms of Use | Mobile User Agreement

  • Topics
  • All Authors
  • Galleries
  • Videos
  • Sponsored Narratives
  • About ZDNet
  • Meet The Team
  • Site Map
  • RSS Feeds
  • Reprint Policy
  • Manage | Log Out
  • Join | Log In | Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Site Assistance
  • ZDNet Academy
  • TechRepublic Forums