A significant outage on Amazon Web Services (AWS), the cloud computing arm of the tech giant, sent shockwaves through the cryptocurrency sector on Monday, leading to widespread disruptions across various platforms.
Users took to social media to express their frustration, highlighting the irony of decentralized communities being significantly affected by a centralized service failure. As reported by Cointribune, the outage incapacitated numerous crypto trading platforms for hours, leaving users and businesses scrambling for solutions.
Among the hardest hit was OpenSea, the leading exchange for non-fungible tokens (NFTs), which experienced severe disruptions. A podcaster and social media editor, June Sternbach, shared a screenshot displaying broken images from the famed Bored Ape Yacht Club collection on OpenSea. These images, once valued at millions of dollars in Ethereum, have drastically decreased in worth, now trading for approximately $30,000. Users attempting to access these NFTs were greeted with a disheartening message: “Cannot load image. This ERC-721 NFT is not accessible due to an ongoing Amazon Web Services outage.”
The event highlighted a frustrating contradiction within the NFT community, as these tokens are promoted as unique digital assets securely stored on the blockchain, supposedly ensuring their permanence and availability. Sternbach tweeted, “NFTs are amazing because you apparently ‘own’ them, but the AWS outage yesterday took out everyone’s apes lol.”
Chris Maddern, the Chief Technology Officer of OpenSea, acknowledged the ongoing AWS issues in a tweet, noting, “As you may have seen online, Amazon AWS is experiencing a severe & extended service degradation. Unfortunately, these AWS issues are ongoing, and we expect to continue to see issues for the next few hours.”
In addition to OpenSea, major players in the cryptocurrency sphere, including Coinbase and Robinhood, also reported connectivity problems stemming from the AWS outage.
A user eloquently summarized the situation, stating, “Most people think crypto means ‘decentralization.’ But the truth is almost 90 percent of the entire crypto industry runs on one company: Amazon Web Services.” The user went on to explain that while AWS provides a cost-effective and efficient solution for many businesses, it also creates a significant single point of failure, warning that “when AWS breaks, the entire crypto world breaks with it.”
As the outage unfolded, it sparked broader discussions about the vulnerabilities inherent in relying on centralized infrastructure within an industry that champions decentralization. The event served as a sobering reminder of the dependence on a single service provider in an ecosystem that seeks to disrupt traditional financial systems.

