Amazon cloud computing outage disrupts Snapchat, Ring and many other online services

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By KELVIN CHAN, Associated Press

Internet users around the world faced widespread disruption early on Monday because of a problem at Amazon’s cloud computing service that took down dozens of major online services, including social media site Snapchat, the Roblox and Fortnite video games and chat app Signal.

About three hours after the outage began, Amazon Web Services said it was starting to recover from the problem.

Amazon Web Services provides behind-the-scenes cloud computing infrastructure to many government departments, universities and businesses, including The Associated Press, which allows them to provide online services.

On DownDetector, a website that tracks online outages, users reported issues with Snapchat, Roblox, Fortnite, online broker Robinhood, the McDonald’s app and many other services. DownDetector said the problems were: “Possibly related to issues at Amazon Web Services.”

Coinbase and Signal both said on X that they were experiencing issues related to the AWS outage.

Even Amazon’s own services weren’t immune. Users of the company’s Ring doorbell cameras and Alexa-powered smart speakers posted on DownDetector that they weren’t working, while others said they were unable to access the Amazon website or download books to their Kindle.

Amazon pinned the outage on issues related to their domain name system, an apparatus that converts web addresses into IP addresses so websites and apps can load on internet-connected devices.

The first signs of trouble emerged at around 3:11 a.m. Eastern Time, when Amazon Web Services reported on its Health Dashboard that it was “investigating increased error rates and latencies for multiple AWS services in the US-EAST-1 Region.”

Later, the company reported that there were “significant error rates” and that engineers were “actively working” on the problem.

Around 6 a.m. Eastern Time, the company said that it was seeing recovery across most of the affected services. “We can confirm global services and features that rely on US-EAST-1 have also recovered,” it said, adding that it is working on a “full resolution.”

This is not the first time issues with Amazon’s key services have caused widespread disruptions. Many popular internet services were down after a brief outage in 2023. AWS’s longest outage in recent history occurred in late 2021, when companies — everything from airline reservations and auto dealerships to payment apps and video streaming services — were affected for more than five hours. Outages also happened in 2020 and 2017.

The company reported that 64 internal AWS services were affected by the issue.

AWS customers include some of the world’s biggest businesses and organizations.

“So much of the world now relies on these three or four big (cloud) compute companies who provide the underlying infrastructure that when there’s an issue like this, it can be really impactful across a broad range, a broad spectrum” of online services, said Patrick Burgess, a cybersecurity expert at U.K.-based BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT.

“The world now runs on the cloud,” and the internet is seen as a utility like water or electricity, as we spend so much of our lives on our smartphones, Burgess said.

And because so much of the online world’s plumbing is underpinned by a handful of companies, when something goes wrong, “it’s very difficult for users to pinpoint what is happening because we don’t see Amazon, we just see Snapchat or Roblox,” Burgess said.

“The good news is that this kind of issue is usually relatively fast (to resolve)” and there’s no indication that it was caused by a cyber incident like a cyberattack, Burgess said.

“This looks like a good old-fashioned technology issue, something’s gone wrong and it will be fixed by Amazon,” he said.

There are “well-established processes” to deal with outages at Amazon Web Services, as well as rivals Google and Microsoft, which together provide most of the world’s cloud computing infrastructure, Burgess said, adding that such outages are usually fixed in “hours rather than days.”

Amazon Web Services said at about 5:30 a.m. Central time that “most AWS Service operations are succeeding normally now.”

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Chinese leader Xi Jinping outlines 5-year plan at closed-door Communist Party meeting

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By KEN MORITSUGU, Associated Press

BEIJING (AP) — Chinese leader Xi Jinping delivered a speech Monday on the opening day of a major meeting of the ruling Communist Party to approve a draft plan laying out its goals for the country over the next five years.

A short dispatch from the official Xinhua News Agency said Xi “expounded on the Party leadership’s draft proposals” for the next five-year plan for national economic and social development, which will cover 2026-2030. It did not provide any details.

Chinese security personnel stand guard at the entrance to the Jingxi Hotel where the Communist Party’s Central Committee is holding its fourth plenum, in Beijing, Monday, Oct. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

The latest plan comes at a time of growing challenges and uncertainty for China, including a persistently sluggish economy, foreign restrictions on its access to the latest technologies and high tariffs imposed on its exports to the United States.

A Xinhua editorial said that the plan should focus on “high-quality” development and technological innovation, while also ensuring national security is protected and the benefits of economic growth are spread fairly and more widely.

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“There will be hardships and obstacles on our way forward, and we may encounter major tests,” the editorial said in discussing economic and national security goals. “We must be prepared to deal with a series of new risks and challenges.”

Analysts and investors are watching the meeting to look for clues about how the plan will balance economic and security interests, and to what extent the plan will call for structural changes to boost consumer spending and manage an aging society.

This week’s four-day meeting brings together about 200 voting members and 170 alternate members of the Central Committee of the Communist Party.

The body will approve the draft five-year plan, though full details likely won’t be released until it is formally approved at the legislature’s next annual meeting, expected in March.

Ahead of the meeting, the Defense Ministry announced late last week that nine senior officers suspected of corruption had been expelled from the Communist Party. Eight were members of the Central Committee, and their removal from the party allows replacements to be named to the committee.

Trump’s ICE Arrested a Whistleblower Who Exposed Sexual Assault in Detention. Now, He’s Left the Country.

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When immigration agents detained Douglas Menjivar in June, it wasn’t his first time.

Menjivar, a 50-year-old master mechanic originally from El Salvador, had lived in the United States for most of the last twenty years. A decade prior, he’d spent 2013 to 2015 in immigrant detention, including at the Houston-area Joe Corley Detention Center, which is operated by the for-profit prison contractor GEO Group. What he endured there changed the course of his life.

While Menijivar was held at the Corley facility facing possible deportation, another detainee sexually assaulted him twice with the help of an accomplice, he said in an official complaint and in interviews with the Texas Observer and other media. The duo targeted him after he confronted them for raping an 18-year-old. Upon seeing the traumatized teen sobbing, Menjivar, who had been sleeping on a top bunk, offered to trade places, believing the culprits would not attack a grown man. But the two jumped him as he slept: One held Menjivar down, shoving a pillow in his face, while the other assaulted him.

After another attack in the shower, he slipped and fell while fleeing his assailants, causing him to pass out and lose a significant amount of blood from a gash in his head. Upon regaining consciousness in the detention center infirmary after the attack, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) supervisor mocked him, calling him “stupid,” he said. He was left with a two-inch scar on his scalp that remains visible.

Douglas Menjivar

Later, Menjivar informed advocates, who pressured ICE to review the case and release him. In March 2015, then-U.S. Representative Sheila Jackson Lee wrote to the ICE Houston field office director, advocating for Menjivar’s release. In response, ICE authorities did something unexpected: Within a couple weeks, they released him, though he still had an active removal order. ICE generally may use prosecutorial discretion to defer deportation on a case-by-case basis, but under the second Trump administration such discretion has largely disappeared, according to experts including Menjivar’s lawyer, Ava Benach.

After his release, Menjivar poured his pain into advocacy, hoping that other immigrants would not have to endure what he had. Despite living in legal limbo, Menjivar contributed to a nationwide civil rights complaint that advocates filed against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in 2017. Community Initiatives for Visiting Immigrants in Confinement (CIVIC), the group that lodged the complaint, alleged that from 2010 to 2016 the DHS Office of the Inspector General, the department’s watchdog, took insufficient action to investigate sexual assault claims. (CIVIC has since changed its name to Freedom for Immigrants.) 

Menjivar also joined Texas activists opposing the expansion of immigrant incarceration, participating in marches to protest plans for yet another for-profit detention center that was ultimately built near Corley. 

For the decade after his release, he held a temporary work permit, and he married an American citizen in 2017. But he was unable to obtain a green card, routinely reporting to ICE until June 10, when agents arrested him after he dutifully arrived for his appointment. That day, they took him to the new Montgomery County ICE facility—the same center he had protested. 

Locked up again, Menjivar wasn’t focused on the trauma he’d suffered, his activism, or his looming deportation to El Salvador, the country he’d fled in 2013 after working undercover for police. Instead, he focused on his wife, Monica Logan, who needed surgeries as part of treatment for breast cancer and a chronic skin condition.

Menjivar had been her sole caretaker, since her other relatives lived out of state. Now, there was no one to help.

Before they married, he’d promised God to care for Logan, and, “if necessary, give my life for her,” Menjivar told the Observer in a video call from the detention center. But, behind bars, he couldn’t even drive her to the hospital.

Menjivar entered Texas in 2004 by crossing without authorization. He was arrested by Border Patrol agents, he said, and received an immigration court date. Menjivar found work as a mechanic on the East Coast, but he did not appear for court (he told the Observer he lost his way in the New York public transportation system), and he received a deportation order in absentia in March 2005. He kept living in the country as an undocumented immigrant; he developed no criminal record. 

The day before New Year’s Eve in 2009, Menjivar returned from New Jersey to El Salvador to care for his sick father and stayed for nearly three years. While there, he worked undercover with police to investigate corrupt officials tied to organized crime, Menjivar said in an Observer interview and a 2013 reasonable fear interview with DHS. However, he quickly learned that the police had not protected his identity. Fearing for his life, he crossed the Texas-Mexico border again in 2013 seeking safe haven and was detained. An immigration judge reinstated his prior removal order, and he was locked up for the next two years.

Menjivar attempted to pursue “withholding of removal,” a form of legal relief sought by people ineligible for asylum that protects them from deportation but does not directly lead to a green card. But he ultimately lost his case. He attempted to fight the denial, but he was hindered by ineffective assistance from a lawyer who had failed to present important evidence and missed a filing deadline on appeal, the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) later found. That attorney, Afton Izen, was suspended from practicing law in 2018 and disbarred in 2021 after other clients complained that she failed to complete paperwork and communicate about their cases, according to State Bar of Texas records. (Izen died shortly after being disbarred.)

During his first stint in detention, Menjivar befriended a Houston immigrant rights activist named Hope Sanford while helping to lead a hunger strike. After ICE used its discretion to release him, she hosted him in her home as he waited to obtain a work permit.

In 2016, Menjivar met Logan. They lived in the same apartment complex and became friends while chatting in the parking lot. Within a week, he told her: “You’re going to be my wife,” and she laughed. In July 2017, they married in Sanford’s backyard.

Monica Logan and Menjivar at their wedding

After marrying a citizen, he made several attempts to become a legal permanent resident.

As a stepping stone, he sought a U-visa, which is reserved for crime victims, based on the assaults in detention. However, since ICE and GEO Group’s staff never documented the attacks, immigration authorities said he lacked proof to establish that the crimes had occurred. He presented evidence of related injuries: The violent assaults left permanent damage to his body and a venereal disease, according to interviews and medical records, yet neither local police nor ICE would sign off on a U-visa application.

In 2024, the Biden administration announced a program that would have allowed some 500,000 undocumented spouses of U.S citizens to become lawful permanent residents, according to DHS estimates. Menjivar applied, but he appeared to be ineligible since he’d crossed the border a second time without authorization after he’d already been given a final order of removal, according to Benach and a federal website outlining the policy. That slim possibility disappeared after Texas, along with 15 other states, sued to block its implementation and a federal court ruled the program illegal last November. 

His lawyer explored other avenues, and she finally had some success: In September 2024, the BIA reopened his withholding of removal case. 

Menjivar kept reporting to ICE for check-ins: sometimes once a year, sometimes every three months. Sanford, who’s in her 70s and considers him her adopted son, had a bad feeling about the June 10th check in—his second one since Trump’s election.

Despite the national immigration crackdown, Menjivar and his wife were optimists and made plans for his 50th birthday, which would be two days later. They’d celebrate at a Tex-Mex restaurant where they were regulars. Logan had already bought his gifts: new chanclas, two new shirts, two pairs of shorts, and two pairs of jeans. But he never got to wear them.

Instead, agents detained him, despite his reopened case. The following day, Benach said she filed a habeas corpus petition and an emergency temporary restraining order to challenge his deportation.

On June 12, his birthday, Logan visited Menjivar. She couldn’t even bring him the card she’d made. They could only speak through a phone, divided by a thick pane of glass. It was one of few times she’d ever seen him cry.

During Menjivar’s second stint in immigration lockup, the guards referred to detainees by the number of their assigned bunk bed. Menjivar was now number 76. “Here, they treat us like rats,” he said by video call in September. (ICE denied the Observer an in-person interview, citing “operational security reasons.”)

While inside, Menjivar befriended younger immigrants and tried to help them. Fredy Chub Choc, an 18-year old asylum-seeker from Guatemala, had been placed in the men’s unit despite being a trans woman. Menjivar stood up to others who threatened or insulted her, she told the Observer.

But Menjivar was dealing with his own mental and physical health issues. He was depressed. And, on a prison diet heavy on rice and beans, without access to the specific diabetes medication he’d been taking, he gained nearly 40 pounds.

Every fall, around the anniversary of his assaults, he experiences nightmares, sometimes throwing punches in his sleep. But this year, his wife was not there to comfort him. He typically managed to sleep only an hour or two, even when he paid other detainees to guard his bed. In September, he said he tried to take his own life, and guards transferred him to solitary confinement for three days. He attempted another hunger strike, but staff threatened to force feed him, he said. 

Reached by email, an ICE spokesperson told the Observer that he would provide comment for this story, but he never did so.

“I personally invite any U.S. citizen, or any person who says this is easy [or] that they treat us well, come to a detention center. Stay here … without seeing your family, without seeing your wife, without seeing your kids, without seeing the freedom that this country mentions,” Menjivar told the Observer a few days after leaving solitary confinement, his voice occasionally trembling as he fought tears.

Menjivar and Logan

Despite his own pain and the possibility of deportation, Menjivar’s main worry was his wife. With her caretaker detained—and his requests for parole and bond denied—Logan kept postponing surgeries.

Considering everything, Menjivar and Logan made a difficult decision. They asked his lawyer to drop the reopened immigration court case. Together, they decided to leave the country where Menjivar had spent about two decades, and where his wife had lived her entire life. They asked an immigration judge to allow him to voluntarily leave for Spain, where Menjivar has two adult daughters from a previous relationship and four grandchildren.

Once the judge approved their plan, Logan prepared her husband’s suitcase, packing new birthday clothes. She had returned the originals and bought the same items two sizes up, to account for his weight gain.

Logan had left the suitcase at the detention center a few days in advance. But, as he prepared to leave, ICE instead gave Menjivar the filthy pair of jeans he’d worn on the day of his arrest—soiled with urine from the hours he’d spent that day forbidden from going to the restroom. When he finally saw Logan at the George Bush Intercontinental Airport, he was trembling, though his head was held high. She fought back tears as the ICE agents watched them until they boarded. He had the suitcase, but it had been zip-tied shut; for the 30 hours to Madrid, he wore those jeans.

During the flight, they gripped each other’s hands. Logan finally let slide a few tears, of joy and rage alike. 

Logan calls her husband “a prisoner of the anti-immigrant war.” Still, she has hope. “We’re going to overcome,” she said in a later video call from Madrid, sitting next to Menjivar in a hotel bed. “We’re going to rise above this.”

The post Trump’s ICE Arrested a Whistleblower Who Exposed Sexual Assault in Detention. Now, He’s Left the Country. appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Zelenskyy says his meeting with Trump was ‘positive’ though he didn’t get the Tomahawk missiles

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By SAMYA KULLAB, Associated Press

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says his reportedly tense meeting with U.S President Donald Trump last week was “positive” — even though he did not secure the Tomahawk missiles for Ukraine — and emphasized what he said is continued American interest in economic deals with Kyiv.

Zelenskyy said Trump reneged on the possibility of sending the long-range missiles to Ukraine, which would have been a major boost for Kyiv, following his phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin hours before the Ukrainian leader and American president were to meet on Friday.

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“In my opinion, he does not want an escalation with the Russians until he meets with them,” Zelenskyy told reporters on Sunday. His comments were embargoed until Monday morning.

Ukraine is hoping to purchase 25 Patriot air defense systems from American firms using frozen Russian assets and assistance from partners, but Zelenskyy said procuring all of these would require time because of long production queues. He said he spoke to Trump about help procuring these quicker, potentially from European partners.

According to Zelenskyy, Trump said during their meeting that Putin’s maximalist demand — that Ukraine cede the entirety of Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions — was unchanged.

Zelenskyy was diplomatic about his meeting with Trump despite reports that he faced pressure to accept Putin’s demands — a tactic he has kept up since the disastrous Oval Office spat on Feb. 28 when the Ukrainian president was scolded on live television for not being grateful for continued American support.

Zelenskyy said that because Trump ultimately supported a freeze along the current front line his overall message “is positive” for Ukraine.

He said Trump was looking to end the war and hopes his meeting in the coming weeks with Putin in Hungary — which does not support Ukraine — will pave the way for a peace deal after their first summit in Alaska in August failed to reach such an outcome.

So far, Zelenskyy said he has not been invited to attend but would consider it if the format for talks were fair to Kyiv.

“We share President Trump’s positive outlook if it leads to the end of the war. After many rounds of discussion over more than two hours with him and his team, his message, in my view, is positive — that we stand where we stand on the line of contact, provided all sides understand what is meant,” Zelenskyy said.

Zelenskyy expressed doubts about Hungary’s capital of Budapest being a suitable location for the next Trump-Putin meeting.

“I do not consider Budapest to be the best venue for such a meeting. Obviously, if it can bring peace, it will not matter which country hosts the meeting,” he added.

Zelenskyy took a stab at Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, saying he doe not believe that a prime minister “who blocks Ukraine everywhere can do anything positive for Ukrainians or even provide a balanced contribution.”

Zelenskyy also expressed skepticism about Putin’s proposal to swap some territory it holds in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions if Ukraine surrenders all of Donetsk and Luhansk regions.

“We wanted to understand exactly what the Russians meant. So far, there is no clear position,” he said.

Zelenskyy said he thinks that all parties have “moved closer” to a possible end to the war.

“That doesn’t mean it will definitely end, but President Trump has achieved a lot in the Middle East, and riding that wave he wants to end Russia’s war against Ukraine,” Zelenskyy added.

He said the United States is interested in bilateral gas projects with Ukraine, including the construction of an LNG terminal in the southern port city of Odesa. Other projects of interest to the U.S. include those related to nuclear energy and oil.