PLAY PODCASTS
The AWS Outage and Hidden Fourth-Party Risks
Episode 43

The AWS Outage and Hidden Fourth-Party Risks

Cyberside Chats: Cybersecurity Insights from the Experts

October 28, 202514m 36s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (mcdn.podbean.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

When Amazon Web Services went down on October 20, 2025, the impact rippled around the world. The outage knocked out Slack messages, paused financial trades, grounded flights, and even stopped people from charging their electric cars. From Coinbase to college classrooms, from food delivery apps to smart homes, millions discovered just how deeply their lives depend on a single cloud provider. 

In this episode, Sherri Davidoff and Matt Durrin break down what really happened inside AWS’s U.S.-East-1 region, why one glitch in a database called DynamoDB cascaded across the globe, and what it teaches us about the growing risk from invisible “fourth-party” dependencies that lurk deep in our digital supply chains. 

Key Takeaways 

  1. Map and monitor your vendor ecosystem — Identify both third- and fourth-party dependencies and track their health. 
  2. Require vendors to disclose key dependencies — Request a “digital bill of materials” that identifies their critical cloud and service providers. 
  3. Diversify critical workloads — Don’t rely on a single hyperscaler region or platform for mission-critical services. 
  4. Integrate vendor outages into incident response playbooks — Treat SaaS and cloud downtime as security events with defined response paths. 
  5. Test your resilience under real-world conditions — Simulate large-scale SaaS or cloud failures in tabletop exercises. 

Resources: 

#cybersecurity #thirdpartyrisk #riskmanagement #infosec #ciso #cyberaware #Fourthpartyrisk #cybersidechats #lmgsecurity #aws #awsoutage