“Full recovery is still expected to take several hours,” AWS wrote in its latest update at 9:51 a.m. ET on Friday.
According to AWS, the outage was tied to overheating at a data center in its main US-East-1 region hosted in northern Virginia. AWS said issues were in a “single Availability Zone” in the region.
“We are actively working to bring additional cooling system capacity online, which will enable us to recover the remaining affected hardware in the impacted zone,” AWS said in the 9:51 a.m. ET update.
AWS said it’s working to resolve impaired EC2 instances, which provide virtual server capacity.
The AWS health dashboard first posted at 8:25 p.m. ET Thursday that it was “investigating instance impairments.”
CNBC has reached out to AWS for additional comment.
The company posted an update two hours later that the issue was tied to a broader AWS outage, with gamblers complaining about lost bets from being unable to cash out on the platform.
Cryptocurrency trading platform Coinbase also posted on X Friday that failures in multiple AWS zones “caused an extended outage of core trading services.” The platform wrote in its post that the primary issue has been fully resolved.
AWS accounts for about a third of the market for cloud infrastructure technology, providing services for millions of companies.