25 comments

  • paxys 2 hours ago

    > The tech industry often talks about “the cloud” as though it were something abstract and untouchable. But the cloud runs on data centers, those data centers have an address, and that address can be hit by a drone.

    Nominating this as the best opening line I have read in a while.

    • newsclues 2 hours ago

      Information and logistics win wars, and you need lots of compute and storage in a modern war.

    • journal an hour ago

      HN could post the IP address of commenters but they wont.

      • imglorp an hour ago

        People used to add contact info in their .signature files (!): HTTP, IRC, (etc) and ICBM...

  • paxys 2 hours ago

    Striking public infrastructure is the oldest kind of war there is.

    The article does raise an important question though - would an AWS data center be considered a civilian target or military?

  • whackernews 2 hours ago

    A new kind of war where people won’t be able to get next day delivery on the 5m USB-C cable that they ordered.

    • andrew_gs 2 hours ago

      Or can't withdraw money from their FAB bank accounts as it's dependent on AWS infra. This is pretty much entirely to do with AWS and not the retail website.

    • fastball 2 hours ago

      That is... not what AWS data centers are primarily used for in 2026.

      • whackernews an hour ago

        You mean they’re not used to sell me cheap Chinese USB-C cables?

        • esseph 41 minutes ago

          AWS is also running government, military, medical, university etc systems. Banking.

    • dragonwriter 2 hours ago

      Yes, Amazon Retail being the sole significant customer of AWS, I guess?

      • an hour ago
        [deleted]
    • samrus an hour ago

      Bro thinks amazon is the onky thing that uses AWS

  • an hour ago
    [deleted]
  • prepend 2 hours ago

    Isn’t this just Iran trying to hit anything “of value” and it really a strategic target? I doubt they are thinking things through vs just firing off semi randomly.

    • perfmode an hour ago

      When resources are finite and require precise guidance, why would they fire semi randomly when they can be strategic?

  • trhway an hour ago

    Buying an antidrone and even antimissile system like say Pantsir-S1, Skyranger 30 or similar is just few million dollars - peanuts compare to the cost of the datacenter to be protected. Once AMAZN starts doing it for themselves, they will possibly also start air-defense-as-a-service using spare capacity.

    With all the money and assets and the whole value of business, the Big Tech has already started to move into energy, and i think the defense, starting with self-defense, will be among the nearest-future next domains they will move into.

    • mc3301 an hour ago

      If everyone has an antidrone/antimissile system, then everyone will finally be safe.

      • trhway an hour ago

        the previous world order based on sovereign states is quickly coming to end. Emerging world order is based on force, and the large corps have more money than many states. The only thing they are missing is the rights of a sovereign entity. Well in a world order driven by force, the rights you have is the rights that you've obtained by force. I think we'll soon see, by analogy with corporate personhood, some version of corporate statehood.

  • YVoyiatzis an hour ago

    WTF are Amazon’s data centers doung in the UAE? Excuse my ignorance, but why there?

    • achille an hour ago

        - local data residency & sovereignty
        - latency
        - bandwidth 
        - regulatory climate
        - competition
      
      uae is business friendly

      all cloud providers have middle east presence

      refineries generate terabytes of sensor data per hour

      the population and people there produce and consume a lot of data

    • samrus an hour ago

      Latency

      • unsnap_biceps an hour ago

        I would image data sovereignty is also a big factor.

  • proshno an hour ago

    [dead]

  • aaron695 2 hours ago

    [dead]