Amazon is having a technical meltdown that's left Alexa and its AWS cloud service reeling on its biggest shopping day of the year
- Amazon's website has been up and down since its Prime Day sales event kicked off at 3 p.m. ET in the US.
- Roughly an hour after Prime Day began, Amazon's personal AI assistant, Alexa, also started experiencing technical problems.
- Users report being unable to login to the app, and Alexa-powered devices being unresponsive to commands.
Amazon's website has been up and down since the start of its Prime Day sales extravaganza in the United States on Monday, and now the issues are starting to affect the company's AI personal assistant, Alexa, and portions of its cloud hosting service as well.
User reports to DownDetector.com are showing that Alexa and the corresponding smartphone app started having issues around 3:50 p.m., nearly an hour after Prime Day - Amazon's biggest shopping day of the year - began.
According to the site, poor server connection and issues logging in are among the most commonly reported by users. One commentator says when giving a command to his Alexa-powered device, the personal assistant cannot process the request and just says, "Sorry, something went wrong."
Business Insider reporters were unable to log in to the app on multiple devices, and received multiple error messages, including this one:
Alexa's downtime is one of many technical issues Amazon is facing on its busiest day of the year, including temporary website crashes and broken links across the site.
While the Amazon Web Services cloud itself appears to be operational, some users are finding that the management console is inaccessible and users are encountering the puppy dog error page as well.
These technical glitches are likely to cost Amazon millions of dollars in lost sales. One Click Retail estimates that Amazon sells about $1 million per minute during peak time on Prime Day, based on last year's data. As of the time of writing, Amazon's site issues had lasted for more than one hour.
Amazon did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment on the site issues.
Check out all of our Amazon Prime Day coverage:
- Amazon Prime Day, a made-up holiday that's become bigger than Black Friday, is here. This is why it's such a big deal.
- Everything you need to know and what to expect on July 16
- Amazon is giving Prime members up to $30 in free cash for shopping at Whole Foods
- Amazon is pulling out all the stops to make sure as many people as possible shop on Prime Day
- Amazon Prime Day is killing Black Friday
- 5 overlooked deals you really don't want to miss out on during Prime Day - but probably have in previous years
- Amazon's made-up holiday is forcing other retailers to offer crazy sales
- 9 money-saving tips and hacks for shopping on Amazon Prime Day
- Prime Day has become such a big shopping event that even retailers that never run deals are jumping on the opportunity