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467

This is why datacenters try to not look like datacenters sometimes. However, for large datacenters that is damn near impossible. Some moron from the street won't know, some blurred out crap on google maps wont show it but countries have their own imaging systems and don't use google maps.

Archive: https://archive.today/mIuNR

From the post:

>Amazon Web Services said late Monday two of its data centers in the United Arab Emirates and a facility in Bahrain were damaged by drone strikes, taking the facilities offline. The incident occurred Sunday morning, with the company posting to its AWS health dashboard at the time that “objects” hit data centers in the UAE, causing “sparks and fire.” AWS also said it was investigating power and connectivity issues at a site in Bahrain. The company’s latest update at 7:19 p.m. EST acknowledged the outages were caused by drone strikes tied to the “ongoing conflict in the Middle East.”

This is why datacenters try to not look like datacenters sometimes. However, for large datacenters that is damn near impossible. Some moron from the street won't know, some blurred out crap on google maps wont show it but countries have their own imaging systems and don't use google maps. Archive: https://archive.today/mIuNR From the post: >>Amazon Web Services said late Monday two of its data centers in the United Arab Emirates and a facility in Bahrain were damaged by drone strikes, taking the facilities offline. The incident occurred Sunday morning, with the company posting to its AWS health dashboard at the time that “objects” hit data centers in the UAE, causing “sparks and fire.” AWS also said it was investigating power and connectivity issues at a site in Bahrain. The company’s latest update at 7:19 p.m. EST acknowledged the outages were caused by drone strikes tied to the “ongoing conflict in the Middle East.”

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