Last week I received an email from the IT department alerting us of an Amazon Web Services (AWS) outage.

As I went through my day, I had trouble accessing some websites, and I couldn’t load some of my podcasts.

I was mostly unaffected. But the same wasn’t true for the rest of the nation.

The historic nine-hour cloud outage affected everything from Roombas to online test-taking platforms.

It’s worth mentioning that it’s the middle of finals week for most students.

Even Amazon’s retail business took a hit.

Entire warehouses shut down, making it impossible to deliver packages during the holiday rush.

Soon after, pundits across all major news outlets discussed how to avoid this issue in the future.

My favorite was when they would bring up the concept of a “multiple” or “distributed” cloud system.

They kept mentioning this concept. And they had no idea they were referring to a solution that already exists.

Today’s Internet Is a Fragile Thing

DARPA, the original architects of the internet, tried to create a distributed network.

That way it could survive a nuclear strike on any part of it.

That’s far from what we have now.

Today there are large centralized data centers run by three cloud-services providers.

A simple glitch or human error at any of these points can bring down entire parts of the internet.

And that’s usually what happens.

According to an analysis by Uptime Institute, hardware or software problems or human error caused over 65% of public outages in 2020.

Malicious activity only caused 2% of the outages.

So, it’s not surprising that there has been at least one major cloud outage almost every month of this year from the three major providers.

Amazon’s historic nine-hour internet outage affected everything from Roombas to online test-taking platforms.

These outages don’t just cause annoyances and frustrations. They cost people and businesses a lot of money.

A Merchant Machine study found that internet outages hit the large tech companies the hardest.

An hour-long outage could cost Amazon $44 million, and Google $21 million.

Amazon’s historic nine-hour internet outage affected everything from Roombas to online test-taking platforms.

So, if the problem is a few centralized data centers prone to failure, the solution is to decentralize and distribute them.

Crypto Can Make the Cloud More Resilient

This is exactly what a few cloud-crypto projects are doing.

They’ve created a network of thousands of nodes spread across the globe.

Each of these nodes is a device that meets certain minimum standards with unused space to spare.

The operators of these nodes receive crypto for contributing their idle space and computing power.

Now, let’s suppose a node goes down the same way a data center might.

That’s fine. There are still plenty of other active nodes with copies of the pieces of data that you’re looking to access.

In other words, these decentralized networks have eliminated the problem of cloud outages.

In fact, Ian King recently recommended just such a crypto project.

Check out his Next Wave Crypto Fortunes service to learn about it.

Regards,

Andrew Prince

Research Analyst, Strategic Fortunes

 

Morning Movers


From open till noon Eastern time.

 

CMC Materials Inc. (Nasdaq: CCMP) provides materials and chemicals to semiconductor manufacturers. It is up 28% this morning on the news that it is being acquired by a rival, Entegris, in a deal worth $6.5 billion.

 

BAIC Motor Corp. Ltd. (OTC: BMCLF) is a Chinese automaker that is up 27% today. The move came after BAIC and Daimler revealed their cross-shareholdings in parts of each other’s businesses, reflecting their commitment to continue their joint venture in the Chinese auto market.

 

Vir Biotechnology Inc. (Nasdaq: VIR) is a clinical-stage immunology company that develops therapeutics to treat and prevent serious infectious diseases. It is up 13% after preclinical data showed that its COVID-19 drug candidate, sotrovimab, maintains its neutralizing ability against the omicron variant.

 

Tandem Diabetes Care Inc. (Nasdaq: TNDM) is a medical device company that designs and commercializes various products for people with insulin-dependent diabetes. The stock is up 10% this morning, but there is no significant news driving the move.

 

Eli Lilly and Co. (NYSE: LLY), the pharmaceutical company, is up 9% this morning. The stock rose after the company raised its revenue guidance for the year citing strong growth in its key products and the upcoming launch of the products in its pipeline.

 

Bird Global Inc. (NYSE: BRDS), is a micro mobility company that delivers electric transportation solutions for short distances. It is up 9% this morning on a rebound after facing a sharp sell-off Tuesday.

 

Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Co. Ltd. (NYSE: BHVN) develops therapeutics targeting neurological diseases and rare disorders. It is up 6% on the news that Nurtec ODT, its migrane prevention drug, received its first global approval outside of the U.S., in Israel.

 

LumiraDx Ltd. (Nasdaq: LMDX) operates as a point-of-care diagnostic company. It is up 6% on the news that it has partnered with digital health nonprofit Audere to offer a self-collected COVID-19 nasal specimen collection kit that has been authorized for use with its testing systems.

 

C3.ai Inc. (NYSE: AI) operates as an enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) software company. It is up 5% after announcing a stock repurchase program worth $100 million.

 

The Progressive Corp. (NYSE: PGR), the insurance company, rose 5% this morning after it reported strong operating results for the month of November.