hollydolly
SF VIP
- Location
- London England
Amazon employees said they were left in the dark during a massive outage, fueling claims the tech giant tested a so-called 'kill switch.'
One staff member made the claim three hours after Amazon Web Services (AWS) went down, which caused widespread disruptions across social media, gaming, food delivery, streaming and financial platforms.
The employee said in the video posted to TikTok: 'They don't have any information for us.... I believe in the kill switch. They are just trying to test it out, and it works.'
Another staffer can be heard in the background adding: 'They're cleansing it right now, from everything.'
Typically, when Amazon systems crash, employees are offered Voluntary Time Off (VTO) to go home. One worker suggested that communication may have been limited because the company's systems were also offline.
The 'kill switch' mentioned in the video likely refers to a conspiracy theory claiming that AWS has a secret mechanism to intentionally shut down online infrastructure for control or censorship.
However, the company cited an 'operational issue' affecting multiple services and said it was 'working on multiple parallel paths to accelerate recovery.'
The outage began around 3.11am ET, prompting AWS to investigate higher error rates and slower response times in its US-EAST-1 region, the company's oldest and largest data hub. All services returned to normal by 6pm.
Published: 18:07, 21 October 2025 | Updated: 19:06, 21 October 2025
12 shares
20
View comments
Top
+99
Home
20
View comments
Amazon employees said they were left in the dark during a massive outage, fueling claims the tech giant tested a so-called 'kill switch.'
One staff member made the claim three hours after Amazon Web Services (AWS) went down, which caused widespread disruptions across social media, gaming, food delivery, streaming and financial platforms.
The employee said in the video posted to TikTok: 'They don't have any information for us.... I believe in the kill switch. They are just trying to test it out, and it works.'
Another staffer can be heard in the background adding: 'They're cleansing it right now, from everything.'
Typically, when Amazon systems crash, employees are offered Voluntary Time Off (VTO) to go home. One worker suggested that communication may have been limited because the company's systems were also offline.
The 'kill switch' mentioned in the video likely refers to a conspiracy theory claiming that AWS has a secret mechanism to intentionally shut down online infrastructure for control or censorship.
However, the company cited an 'operational issue' affecting multiple services and said it was 'working on multiple parallel paths to accelerate recovery.'
The outage began around 3.11am ET, prompting AWS to investigate higher error rates and slower response times in its US-EAST-1 region, the company's oldest and largest data hub. All services returned to normal by 6pm.
The employee who posted the video (pictured) claimed that AWS activated the 'kill switch,' causing the massive outage
TRENDING

Andrew 'could refuse to leave home even if King tries to evict him'
10.2k viewing now

Fergie, Beatrice and Eugenie are all distancing themselves from Andrew
54.1k viewing now

Restaurant owner takes aim at wealthy Highgate residents
9.8k viewing now
The Daily Mail has contacted Amazon for comment and has yet to receive a response.
The TikTok video has since gone viral on X, where many users agreed that the tech giant activated a kill switch.
'If they actually have a kill switch and just tested it on their entire workforce, that is genuinely terrifying,' one user posted.
DownDetector, a website that tracks online outages, said in a Facebook post that it received more than 11 million user reports of issues at more than 2,500 companies.
Users reported trouble with the social media app Snapchat, the Roblox and Fortnite video games, the online broker Robinhood and the McDonald's app, as well as Netflix, Disney+ and many other services.
The cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase and the Signal chat app both said on X that they were experiencing trouble related to the outage.
Amazon's own services were also affected. Users of the company's Ring doorbell cameras and Alexa-powered smart speakers reported that they were not working, while others said they were unable to access the Amazon website or download books to their Kindle.
Many college and K-12 students were unable to submit or access their homework or course materials on Monday because the AWS outage knocked out Canvas, a widely used educational platform.
'I currently can't grade any online assignments, and my students can't access their online materials' because of the outage's effect on learning-management systems, said Damien P Williams, a professor of philosophy and data science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
While the exact number of schools impacted was not immediately known, Canvas said on its website that it is used by 50 percent of college and university students in North America, including all Ivy League schools in the US.
At the University of California, Riverside, students could not submit assignments, take quizzes or access course materials, and online instruction was limited, the institution said.
The Ohio State University informed its 70,000 students at all six campuses by email Monday morning that online course materials might be inaccessible due to the outage and that 'students should connect with their instructors for any alternative plans.'
One staff member made the claim three hours after Amazon Web Services (AWS) went down, which caused widespread disruptions across social media, gaming, food delivery, streaming and financial platforms.
The employee said in the video posted to TikTok: 'They don't have any information for us.... I believe in the kill switch. They are just trying to test it out, and it works.'
Another staffer can be heard in the background adding: 'They're cleansing it right now, from everything.'
Typically, when Amazon systems crash, employees are offered Voluntary Time Off (VTO) to go home. One worker suggested that communication may have been limited because the company's systems were also offline.
The 'kill switch' mentioned in the video likely refers to a conspiracy theory claiming that AWS has a secret mechanism to intentionally shut down online infrastructure for control or censorship.
However, the company cited an 'operational issue' affecting multiple services and said it was 'working on multiple parallel paths to accelerate recovery.'
The outage began around 3.11am ET, prompting AWS to investigate higher error rates and slower response times in its US-EAST-1 region, the company's oldest and largest data hub. All services returned to normal by 6pm.
Amazon workers claim 'kill switch' triggered during massive outage that took down 'half the internet'
By STACY LIBERATORE, US SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY EDITORPublished: 18:07, 21 October 2025 | Updated: 19:06, 21 October 2025
12 shares
20
View comments
Top
+99
Home
20
View comments
Amazon employees said they were left in the dark during a massive outage, fueling claims the tech giant tested a so-called 'kill switch.'
One staff member made the claim three hours after Amazon Web Services (AWS) went down, which caused widespread disruptions across social media, gaming, food delivery, streaming and financial platforms.
The employee said in the video posted to TikTok: 'They don't have any information for us.... I believe in the kill switch. They are just trying to test it out, and it works.'
Another staffer can be heard in the background adding: 'They're cleansing it right now, from everything.'
Typically, when Amazon systems crash, employees are offered Voluntary Time Off (VTO) to go home. One worker suggested that communication may have been limited because the company's systems were also offline.
The 'kill switch' mentioned in the video likely refers to a conspiracy theory claiming that AWS has a secret mechanism to intentionally shut down online infrastructure for control or censorship.
However, the company cited an 'operational issue' affecting multiple services and said it was 'working on multiple parallel paths to accelerate recovery.'
The outage began around 3.11am ET, prompting AWS to investigate higher error rates and slower response times in its US-EAST-1 region, the company's oldest and largest data hub. All services returned to normal by 6pm.

The employee who posted the video (pictured) claimed that AWS activated the 'kill switch,' causing the massive outage
TRENDING

Andrew 'could refuse to leave home even if King tries to evict him'
10.2k viewing now

Fergie, Beatrice and Eugenie are all distancing themselves from Andrew
54.1k viewing now

Restaurant owner takes aim at wealthy Highgate residents
9.8k viewing now
The Daily Mail has contacted Amazon for comment and has yet to receive a response.
The TikTok video has since gone viral on X, where many users agreed that the tech giant activated a kill switch.
'If they actually have a kill switch and just tested it on their entire workforce, that is genuinely terrifying,' one user posted.
DownDetector, a website that tracks online outages, said in a Facebook post that it received more than 11 million user reports of issues at more than 2,500 companies.
Users reported trouble with the social media app Snapchat, the Roblox and Fortnite video games, the online broker Robinhood and the McDonald's app, as well as Netflix, Disney+ and many other services.
The cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase and the Signal chat app both said on X that they were experiencing trouble related to the outage.
Amazon's own services were also affected. Users of the company's Ring doorbell cameras and Alexa-powered smart speakers reported that they were not working, while others said they were unable to access the Amazon website or download books to their Kindle.
Many college and K-12 students were unable to submit or access their homework or course materials on Monday because the AWS outage knocked out Canvas, a widely used educational platform.
'I currently can't grade any online assignments, and my students can't access their online materials' because of the outage's effect on learning-management systems, said Damien P Williams, a professor of philosophy and data science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
While the exact number of schools impacted was not immediately known, Canvas said on its website that it is used by 50 percent of college and university students in North America, including all Ivy League schools in the US.
At the University of California, Riverside, students could not submit assignments, take quizzes or access course materials, and online instruction was limited, the institution said.
The Ohio State University informed its 70,000 students at all six campuses by email Monday morning that online course materials might be inaccessible due to the outage and that 'students should connect with their instructors for any alternative plans.'