Amazon status: access issues and outage reports
Problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.
Amazon (Amazon.com) is the world’s largest online retailer and a prominent cloud services provider. Originally a book seller but has expanded to sell a wide variety of consumer goods and digital media as well as its own electronic devices.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Amazon reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
July 12: Problems at Amazon
Amazon is having issues since 05:20 PM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Amazon users through our website.
- Website Down (47%)
- Errors (28%)
- Sign in (25%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Amazon outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Website Down | 4 hours ago |
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Sign in | 14 hours ago |
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Errors | 15 hours ago |
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Errors | 16 hours ago |
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Sign in | 17 hours ago |
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Sign in | 18 hours ago |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.
Amazon Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Love Pandey (@LovePandey26) reportedHi @amazonIN, I am experiencing issues while trying to return an Amazon Fire TV Stick and your customer service has been completely useless. Here is the order number: 407-6210887-8577945. Kindly help me return this.
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𝕻𝖆𝖗𝖆4𝕭𝖊𝖑𝖑𝖚𝖒 (@Para4Bellum) reportedNow the fun part. I get to try and track down a run capacitor on a Sunday. I turned down thev24/7 HVAC guys offer to get me running for $600. The part is $33 on Amazon.
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RMF325 (@325RMF) reported@TheNovel_Kberly Broken tooth? Oh, I'm so sorry, that sounds horrible. I have used the Pet Labs brand most often, but there are plenty of others that are good too; I get them all on Amazon. Hope you are feeling much better very soon!
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Imeobong John (@D_Big_John) reportedso you want a website like Amazon... No problem... Can you pay like Amazon??
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Desmond Dunne (@Desmundo67) reported@PeterTatchell @TheGreenParty Start with Starbucks. Make them pay their tax, then Amazon and EBay. The role of our governments is to let the wealthy who actually own the hedge funds who own the corporations to pay **** all in comparison to ordinary people. No western government is allowed to go after them, fix that and you fix the world. PS you can’t vote for the solution you need to rise against it.
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𐙚 ˚ | .𖥔 ݁ ˖ִ ࣪⚝ mewz ⚝ ݁ ˖ִ .𖥔 ݁ | 𐙚 (@ghostmewz) reported@DollzHousee @twilitmemories @kitcychu You have to replace the cord, easy fix, can buy cord on amazon
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Abomination (@Abomination81) reportedLifehack. If you have a garage, put a fridge with water and drinks in there. Give it to post men, ups, amazon in the summer.... NEVER have any issues again... signature required NOPE. Wrong address NOPE NOPE.
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Kalyan (@kalyan7h) reported@DealsDhamaka @amazon Online providers going nuts. @Flipkart is even worse, bought an AC and had a terrible experience.
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Rizwan Ali (@thenameisrizwn) reported@AmazonHelp Hello , I have ₹3,000 stuck in my Amazon Shopping Gift Card balance due to an accidental purchase. Because of a digital restriction, all my orders are being cancelled. Please resolve my account issue or help me use my balance. This has been pending for too long.
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zet (@ciainvestor) reportedI really think Q3 for $AAOI is going to surprise a lot of people. AI networking demand hasn’t slowed down, hyperscalers are still spending, and the Microsoft Maia + Amazon Trainium story is just getting started. If management delivers I expect 300-350 by eoy. NFA.
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Anish kumar patel (@AnishKu04929366) reportedDear @amazonpay & @JioCare, I made a ₹299 Jio recharge through Amazon Pay, but it is still showing “Mobile Recharge Pending”. The amount has already been deducted, but the recharge has not been completed. Kindly look into this issue and resolve it as soon as possible.
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TeamEvilLeft (@TeamEvilLeft) reportedHe fell off when he stepped down as CEO of Amazon and so did Amazon
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Christ is King (@beil_cathy) reported@quidesttruth @CoffinMedia @ChristineNiles1 Why did John Paul II kiss the Koran in 1999, a gesture many saw as implying respect for a religion that denies the Divinity of Christ? Why the Pachamama statues in the Vatican Gardens and near the altar during the Amazon Synod under Pope Francis: widely identified with pagan earth worship and provoking outrage and even being thrown into the Tiber? And similar concerns with indigenous or syncretic elements under later pontificates, including gestures that appear to blur the lines between Catholic worship and false religions. A priest meeting erring Catholics privately to potentially win them back (following the example of St. Paul engaging opponents for the sake of truth) is not the same as a Pope’s high-profile symbolic acts in sacred spaces that risk confusing the faithful and seeming to honor error. One is missionary prudence in a time of crisis; the other raises serious questions about the direction of post-conciliar false worship being called ecumenism.
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sajan jhawar (@jhawar_sajan) reported@AmazonHelp @amazonIN I have already raised this issue with your customer service team. How is it possible that the caller had complete information about the order — from the product we ordered to the exact amount that was to be paid? This appears to be a scam being carried out in Amazon’s name.
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Suki (@BellyRubPlease) reported@amazon Horrible customer service today especially from Sheena on the leadership team. I was lied to by 2 reps about the reason for a delayed return. Sheena was snarky and refused to issue a credit. Rethinking my prime membership now.
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Milk Road (@milkroaddaily) reportedAppLovin already owns $11B of the $100B of mobile gaming ad spend per year. Which means they can't continue growing at 59% per year forever. So they're opening the platform to every advertiser on Earth - starting with a focus on E-commerce, then insurance and fintech. If it works, the addressable market goes from ~$100B in mobile gaming ads to $600B+ in digital advertising. That's the bull case. The bear case: The company's ad trading system (AXON) became exceptional by predicting behavior inside games. Predicting who buys a mattress or an insurance policy is a different problem, and Meta and Amazon hold much richer purchase-intent data. eBay, Snap, and Groupon all tried to expand past their original strengths and struggled. Whether AppLovin's data is good enough for e-commerce will show up in return-on-ad-spend numbers over the next few quarters, and nowhere else. There are other yellow flags too. 👇
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Sophie😩🫦 (@Sophie_thek5g) reportedA Stanford researcher named Fei-Fei Li once hired 49,000 strangers from 167 countries to look at pictures and answer one simple question, and their answers became the foundation modern AI is built on today. Back in 2006, Li was a freshly minted PhD from Caltech starting her first job as an assistant professor. Everyone around her was chasing the same idea, that the path to smarter AI ran through smarter algorithms. Better math. Cleverer code. She looked at the field and decided they had the problem backwards. A psychologist had once estimated that the average person can recognize about 30,000 different kinds of objects on sight. A dog. A very specific species of fern. Li's question was simple and almost embarrassing in hindsight. If a computer was ever going to see the world the way a person does, shouldn't it first be shown what the world actually looks like, at real scale, in all its variety? Nobody was building that. So she decided to build it herself. She moved to Princeton and pulled in a lexical database built by linguists there called WordNet, roughly 22,000 categories of nouns organized by meaning. That became the skeleton. Then came the impossible part. She needed millions of real photographs sorted correctly into every one of those categories, and there was no way she or her small team could label them all by hand. Working nonstop, one image a minute, with no sleep and no food, it would have taken one person almost 23 years. So she turned to Amazon Mechanical Turk, a website where you can pay strangers online to do small tasks for a few cents each. Over the next three years, those 49,000 workers in 167 countries looked at photograph after photograph and answered the same simple question, over and over. Does this picture show a dog. Does this picture show a fire truck. Each image got checked by multiple workers before it counted. By the time they were done, they had sorted more than 14 million images into over 20,000 categories. They called it ImageNet. When she finally brought it to the biggest computer vision conference in the world in 2009, the field shrugged. A hundred times bigger than any dataset that existed, and almost nobody cared. They didn't even give her a stage. They gave her a folding table in the corner of a convention center in Miami, wedged between a few posters nobody was reading. So Li did something clever. Instead of just publishing the data and hoping someone noticed, she turned it into a competition. Every year, teams would submit AI systems and see whose could recognize images most accurately against ImageNet. She built the incentive that the data alone could not create. For two years, nothing dramatic happened. Then in 2012, a team out of Toronto entered a neural network called AlexNet, trained on two ordinary gaming graphics cards. Every serious entry before it had an error rate hovering around 26 percent. AlexNet came in at 15.3 percent. An 11 point jump in a single year, inside a competition that used to inch forward by fractions of a point. That one result is the actual starting gun for the AI you use today. Not a lab announcement. Not a keynote. Just 49,000 strangers on the internet answering questions about photographs, three years before anyone realized what they had built.
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Deepak Shahi (@deepakshahii) reportedWhy am I unable to watch or download today’s new episode of #Alliance (Episode 19) on #AmazonPrime Video India? Is anyone else facing the same issue? Please fix this as soon as possible. @PrimeVideoIN @amazonIN @amazon #Amazon
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Are31 / Austin Tucker (@AREGames_Tweets) reported@laurabrodb @GigglingGanon Well you asked for it so be prepared for a LONG response…. hopefully it gives you a different perspective I can assure you that nobody shoes up to work just to cause problems. I would offer to go home myself rather then let other people who drove an hour away who didn’t get picked for a route but were forced to show up. You’re really supporting a billion dollar corporation arresting someone who was confused about if they actually worked today or not. I knew a guy who had a car wreck on the ice on the way to work, literally had no way home and he wasn’t picked for a route. Stone cold they told him he has to go home, I offered up my route (I was a lead driver) to him just because it was the right thing to do In the mornings before work I was specifically told NOT to check the app to see if I had a route today because I wouldnt show up or I had no route- but if you do they write you up for no show. You HAVE to show up for an hour and they won’t tell you the days it’s going to be or not so you cant plan ahead or accommodate. Start thinking about how you would feel if this was you should up to work and getting arrested, most people just aren’t bold around to stick around. they arrest one of their workers they asked to show up and are sending home an hour later for 0 reason other than they pick and choose who to screw over today. They laugh about it and say they don’t need you if you ask to come in to help for that hour on your off days. While drivers are out there (like yourself most days) struggling to load their vans up by themselves with 300-400 packages in less than 15 minutes. The micro managers say they don’t need you to help load the vans- but they run and ride when it’s time for loadout and abandon you when you need them there to help you get your van loaded up nicely and organized to not have a miserable day. And they’ll happily throw boxes into the back if you’re behind forcing you to stop and reorganize them later. Even a 5 minute setback on your route and they’re calling you asking what happened. You do this al day and have to run your route to make it home before 8 pm. If you’re scheduled you’re scheduled for an 11 hour period and only get home once you’re packages are complete. Don’t dare think about returning like 30 packages to the station unless you’re actually sick and throwing up. You’re gonna be in for some **** and guaranteed to lose any slim chance you had at getting a bonus that week. (I never got one in a year- and my best week I got 28 positive reviews on my deliveries. The company owner gave me an amazon backpack. Mine was failing apart by this point anyways. It got so bad I was about to start an advocate group for delivery drivers. Fortunately for them and unfortunately for drivers I didn’t have the time or funding for that. It’s also the first job I’ve ever worked where there was no culture or soul. Everyone there is miserable and overworked or a micromanager overpaid to do nothing. I worked for a Delivery Service Partner (DSP) called ELKO Logistics at Amazon DDX6.
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Tam Nguyen (@BTC_LTC_XRP) reportedWhy Filecoin ($FIL) Could Become the Data Infrastructure Layer of the Decentralized Internet Most people describe Filecoin as “decentralized storage.” That description is correct—but incomplete. The larger ambition is to build an open, verifiable and permissionless market for storing, retrieving and eventually computing over data. In that system: • Storage providers contribute physical infrastructure • Clients pay to store and access data • Cryptographic proofs verify that data remains stored • Smart contracts automate agreements around data • FIL coordinates incentives, collateral and network security If this vision succeeds, Filecoin could evolve from a storage marketplace into a decentralized cloud infrastructure layer. But the investment thesis is not simple. Filecoin has substantial technical infrastructure and real storage capacity, while still needing to prove that this capacity can translate into recurring demand, revenue and sustainable value for FIL. That gap between infrastructure and economic adoption is where both the opportunity and the risk exist. 1. Data is becoming one of the world’s most valuable resources The global economy is producing more data through: • Artificial intelligence • Scientific research • Video and media • Enterprise software • Autonomous systems • Blockchains • Internet of Things devices • Digital identity • Government and public archives AI makes this trend even more important. Models require enormous datasets for training, evaluation, fine-tuning and inference. Those datasets must be stored, verified, shared, updated and preserved. Today, most cloud data is controlled by a small number of centralized providers. This creates several risks: • Vendor lock-in • Censorship • Single points of failure • Unverifiable storage guarantees • Limited data portability • Dependence on corporate pricing policies • Difficulty proving where and how data is stored Filecoin proposes a different model: An open market where storage capacity can be purchased from independent providers and verified cryptographically. If data becomes the fuel of the AI economy, infrastructure that can store and verify that data may become increasingly valuable. 2. Filecoin turns physical storage into a verifiable on-chain service Traditional cloud users must trust the provider’s internal records. Filecoin uses cryptographic proofs to reduce that trust requirement. Two important mechanisms are: Proof-of-Replication This proves that a storage provider has created a unique physical copy of a client’s data. Proof-of-Spacetime This proves that the provider continues storing that data over an agreed period. These proofs are submitted to the blockchain. The goal is not merely to claim that data is stored. It is to make storage commitments independently verifiable. This creates a new type of infrastructure: Proof-based cloud services. That distinction matters. Filecoin is not only competing through storage price. It is attempting to create storage with transparent, programmable and cryptographically enforceable guarantees. 3. FIL is the economic coordination asset of the network FIL has several interconnected functions. It is used for: • Paying for storage and retrieval services • Rewarding storage providers • Paying blockchain transaction fees • Providing provider collateral • Securing storage commitments • Supporting smart-contract activity on the FVM • Participating in Filecoin-based financial markets Storage providers must commit collateral to participate in the network. This creates economic consequences for failing to maintain storage commitments or follow protocol rules. FIL therefore does more than pay transaction fees. It helps coordinate trust between clients and infrastructure providers who may not know each other. The strongest version of the FIL thesis is not: “People will buy FIL because decentralized storage is popular.” It is: “As more valuable data and cloud services move onto Filecoin, more FIL will be required for payments, collateral, network operations and programmable data services.” That relationship must become stronger for FIL to capture lasting economic value. 4. Filecoin already solved the capacity problem One of Filecoin’s greatest achievements is that it successfully attracted a massive amount of physical storage infrastructure. The network has operated with storage capacity measured in exbibytes, making it the largest decentralized storage network by available capacity. This proves that crypto-economic incentives can coordinate a global supply side. But available capacity is not the same as productive demand. A storage network can have enormous capacity while generating limited revenue if much of that capacity remains unused or is supported mainly by token incentives. This leads to Filecoin’s most important transition: From subsidized capacity growth to paid storage demand. Early Filecoin economics helped bootstrap hardware, operators and storage capacity. The next phase must prioritize: • Paying customers • Useful datasets • Reliable retrieval • Recurring revenue • Sustainable provider businesses • Real demand for network services Filecoin does not need more empty storage. It needs more economically valuable data. 5. Filecoin must become useful, not merely large Capacity is an infrastructure metric. Utilization is an economic metric. A serious Filecoin investor should distinguish between: • Raw storage capacity • Data stored through incentivized deals • Paid storage contracts • Unique customer data • Retrievable data • Renewed contracts • Recurring customer spending Not every byte stored has equal economic value. A dataset that is uploaded once because storage is heavily subsidized is less valuable than a customer repeatedly paying to store, retrieve and process business-critical data. The long-term success of Filecoin depends on moving from: “How many exbibytes can the network hold?” to: “How much are customers willing to pay the network each month?” That is the difference between infrastructure capacity and a functioning economy. 6. Filecoin is expanding from storage into an on-chain cloud Filecoin’s opportunity is larger than archival storage. The ecosystem is developing toward programmable and verifiable cloud services, sometimes described as an on-chain cloud. This broader stack can include: • Hot and cold storage • Fast data retrieval • Content delivery • Data indexing • Data availability • Computation over stored data • Access control • Payment automation • Verifiable service agreements • AI-data infrastructure The vision is that developers should not need to manually negotiate with individual storage providers. Applications should be able to request, pay for and verify cloud services programmatically. That would make Filecoin resemble an open cloud marketplace rather than a simple blockchain storage product. The strategic opportunity is enormous. But it also places Filecoin in competition with some of the best-funded and most mature technology companies in the world. 7. The Filecoin Virtual Machine changes the network’s potential The Filecoin Virtual Machine, or FVM, introduced programmable smart contracts to Filecoin. The Ethereum-compatible runtime allows developers to use familiar tools and deploy Solidity-based applications. This enables applications that combine smart contracts with verifiable storage. Potential use cases include: • Automated storage contracts • Perpetual data preservation • Storage insurance • Provider reputation systems • FIL lending markets • Data access subscriptions • Data DAOs • Decentralized content platforms • AI-data marketplaces • Tokenized ownership of datasets • Programmable retrieval payments Before the FVM, Filecoin was primarily a storage marketplace. With the FVM, data stored on Filecoin can become part of programmable economic systems. This creates a potentially powerful combination: Smart contracts + verifiable storage + physical infrastructure. However, programmability alone does not guarantee adoption. The FVM must attract developers, liquidity and applications that users genuinely need. 8. Filecoin may be one of crypto’s strongest AI infrastructure plays AI depends heavily on centralized infrastructure. Training and deploying models requires: • Large datasets • Reliable storage • Data provenance • Version control • Permission management • Compute resources • Verifiable model outputs Filecoin could support several parts of this stack. For example, Filecoin could be used to preserve training datasets, model checkpoints, research archives and AI-generated content. Cryptographic identifiers can help verify that a particular model or application used a specific version of a dataset. This may improve: • Data provenance • Reproducibility • Auditability • Dataset ownership • Licensing • Resistance to data tampering In a future where AI models produce enormous amounts of synthetic content, proving where data originated may become increasingly important. But investors should avoid the simplistic claim that: “AI growth automatically means FIL price growth.” AI customers will choose infrastructure based on cost, speed, reliability, compliance and developer experience. Filecoin must earn that demand. 9. Filecoin is a DePIN network with real physical infrastructure Filecoin is one of the clearest examples of decentralized physical infrastructure, or DePIN. Storage providers invest in: • Hard drives • Servers • Networking equipment • Data centers • Electricity • Technical operations The blockchain coordinates this real-world infrastructure through incentives and cryptographic verification. This is different from a token whose utility exists only inside financial applications. Filecoin connects a digital asset to a measurable physical service. That provides a stronger fundamental foundation than purely speculative token activity. However, physical infrastructure introduces real operating costs. Storage providers must remain profitable after accounting for: • Hardware depreciation • Electricity • Bandwidth • Maintenance • Staffing • FIL collateral • Token-price volatility • Competition If provider economics are unattractive, capacity can leave the network. A healthy FIL economy must work for both token holders and infrastructure operators. 10. Filecoin’s tokenomics are more complex than Bitcoin’s Filecoin has a maximum token supply of 2 billion FIL, but investors should not treat that number like Bitcoin’s fixed circulating supply. FIL issuance is influenced by several mechanisms: • Block rewards • Network-growth-based issuance • Time-based issuance • Team and investor vesting • Provider collateral locking • Reward vesting • Fee burning • Penalty burning A portion of newly earned provider rewards is vested rather than immediately liquid. Storage providers also lock FIL as collateral. Transaction fees and penalties can remove FIL from circulation through burning. This creates a dynamic supply system. At different points in the cycle, FIL may experience: • New issuance • Vesting-related supply pressure • Collateral-driven locking • Reward vesting • Token burning • Provider selling to cover operating costs The relevant question is not simply: “How many FIL exist?” It is: “Is economically productive demand for FIL growing faster than liquid supply?” 11. FIL has structural selling pressure that cannot be ignored Storage providers operate real businesses. They must pay for hardware, electricity, bandwidth and employees. A portion of the FIL they earn may therefore be sold to finance operations. This can create continuous structural selling pressure. The network can compensate for that pressure only if new demand emerges from: • Clients purchasing storage • Providers acquiring collateral • Developers using the FVM • Investors supplying FIL to provider-financing markets • Users paying for retrieval and cloud services • Applications locking or consuming FIL This is why a growing network does not automatically guarantee a rising token price. Token value depends on the balance between demand, issuance, locking, burning and provider selling. Filecoin needs greater economic throughput—not just greater technical throughput. 12. Collateral creates utility, but also capital inefficiency Requiring storage providers to lock FIL creates accountability. Providers have something economically valuable at risk if they fail to honor storage commitments. This strengthens the network. But collateral requirements can also create barriers. A provider may have adequate hardware and customers but still require significant FIL to expand operations. If FIL becomes expensive or financing is unavailable, growth may become difficult. This creates an important role for FVM-based lending markets. FIL holders may provide capital to storage providers in exchange for yield. In theory, this allows: • Token holders to earn returns • Providers to access collateral • Network capacity to expand • Capital to remain within the ecosystem But these markets introduce risks: • Smart-contract vulnerabilities • Provider defaults • Liquidation risk • FIL price volatility • Unsustainable incentives • Maturity mismatches FIL lending should not be confused with protocol-native risk-free staking. Yield exists because someone is taking economic risk. 13. Filecoin’s real moat may be its accumulated infrastructure Building decentralized storage is not only a software problem. A competitor must attract: • Storage providers • Hardware investment • Geographic distribution • Clients • Developer tools • Retrieval systems • Indexing infrastructure • Liquidity • Exchange support • Operational expertise Filecoin has spent years building these network effects. Its ecosystem includes storage operators, clients, developers, research organizations and products built around IPFS and content-addressed data. This creates a meaningful infrastructure advantage. However, a moat based on capacity weakens if customers find the product difficult to use. The strongest moat would combine: Capacity + demand + reliable retrieval + developer adoption + switching costs. Filecoin has already built much of the capacity. It must deepen the remaining components. 14. IPFS and Filecoin are complementary—but not the same IPFS is a peer-to-peer protocol for addressing and distributing content. It uses content identifiers, allowing data to be referenced by what it contains rather than where it is located. But IPFS alone does not guarantee that data will remain stored permanently. Filecoin adds economic incentives and verifiable storage commitments. A simplified distinction is: IPFS helps locate and transfer content. Filecoin pays providers to preserve that content. The combination can support a more resilient internet in which data is not tied permanently to one centralized server or domain. However, widespread IPFS usage does not automatically create FIL demand. Economic value reaches FIL only when applications use Filecoin’s paid storage, collateral, settlement or smart-contract infrastructure. 15. Retrieval is as important as storage Storing data cheaply is only part of the cloud experience. Users expect data to be available quickly and reliably. Filecoin historically focused more heavily on proving long-term storage than delivering cloud-like retrieval performance. For many commercial applications, slow or unpredictable retrieval is unacceptable. This is why the ecosystem’s development of retrieval, caching, hot storage and content-delivery layers is crucial. Different data requires different service levels: • Archival data prioritizes durability and cost • Websites require fast retrieval • Video requires high bandwidth • AI applications may need frequent access to huge datasets • Enterprise data requires reliability and compliance Filecoin does not need every storage provider to offer every service. But the ecosystem must offer end-to-end products that feel competitive with conventional cloud platforms. Customers buy solutions—not protocols. 16. Filecoin can complement centralized cloud rather than replace it The most realistic Filecoin thesis may not involve destroying Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud or Microsoft Azure. Instead, Filecoin may initially complement them. Organizations could use: • Centralized cloud for high-performance computing • Filecoin for verifiable archives • Multiple providers for redundancy • Content addressing for data integrity • Decentralized storage for disaster recovery • Filecoin proofs for regulatory or public verification Hybrid cloud architectures may be easier to adopt than fully decentralized systems. Filecoin does not need to capture the entire cloud market. Even a small share of the global data-storage economy could represent significant demand. But that demand must be paid, recurring and connected to FIL. 17. The network’s 2026 strategy represents an important shift Filecoin’s stated strategic direction increasingly emphasizes paid usage, useful work and sustainable provider economics. This is the correct direction. The network’s first phase demonstrated that decentralized incentives could create enormous storage capacity. The next phase must prove that Filecoin can build profitable services on top of it. The key transition is: From rewarding capacity to rewarding economic usefulness. That means evaluating success through: • Paid storage revenue • Renewal rates • Active customers • Retrieval demand • Provider profitability • Application revenue • FIL consumed or locked by real activity If the network executes this transition, Filecoin could move closer to a sustainable infrastructure economy. If it fails, it risks remaining an impressive but underutilized storage system. 18. Filecoin’s valuation should not be based only on cloud comparisons It is tempting to compare Filecoin directly with the market capitalization or revenue of centralized cloud companies. That comparison can be misleading. AWS owns infrastructure, controls customer relationships and captures corporate revenue. FIL holders do not own Filecoin storage providers or receive a legal claim on their profits. FIL is a network asset, not equity. Its value depends on how the protocol requires and uses the token. A growing storage market benefits FIL only when growth produces: • Token payments • Collateral demand • Fee burning • FVM activity • Reduced circulating supply • Stronger network security • Greater monetary demand for FIL Investors must analyze token-value capture—not merely industry size. A massive addressable market is meaningless if the token captures little of the value created. 19. The strongest bullish argument Filecoin already possesses something most crypto projects are still trying to build: A functioning global market connected to real physical infrastructure. It has: • Exbibytes of storage capacity • Independent infrastructure providers • Cryptographic storage verification • A native collateral system • Smart-contract programmability • EVM compatibility • Integration with content-addressed data • A growing decentralized-cloud strategy • Potential relevance to AI and scientific data • Years of operational history If Filecoin converts this infrastructure into meaningful paid demand, the network could become one of crypto’s most economically important protocols. FIL would then sit at the center of a marketplace connecting data, hardware, capital and software. That is a much larger thesis than “cheap decentralized storage.” 20. The bearish case must be taken seriously Filecoin faces substantial risks: • Storage demand may remain heavily subsidized • Paid revenue may grow too slowly • Retrieval performance may remain difficult • The user experience may be too complex • Centralized cloud providers may remain more convenient • Storage providers may continuously sell FIL • Token issuance may exceed organic demand • Collateral requirements may restrict growth • FVM adoption may remain limited • AI narratives may not translate into paying customers • Competing decentralized-storage networks may gain market share • Regulatory requirements may limit enterprise adoption • Available capacity may continue to exceed real demand The greatest risk is not that Filecoin stops working. The greatest risk is that it successfully stores enormous amounts of data while producing insufficient economic demand for FIL. 21. What would fundamentally strengthen the FIL thesis? Investors should monitor: Growth in paid storage revenue Storage-deal renewal rates Number of paying customers Retrieval volume and performance Growth in useful data stored Provider profitability FIL locked as collateral FIL issuance versus burning FVM users, contracts and application revenue Adoption by AI and scientific-data projects Growth of hot-storage and cloud-service products Reduced dependence on token subsidies Better developer and customer experience Enterprise integrations with recurring demand Evidence that network growth creates direct FIL demand These metrics matter more than raw storage capacity alone. Final thesis Filecoin is one of the most ambitious infrastructure projects in crypto. It is attempting to create an open market for humanity’s data—where storage can be purchased globally, verified cryptographically and controlled through programmable agreements. The bull case rests on several ideas: • Global data creation will continue growing • AI will increase demand for data infrastructure • Centralized cloud concentration creates real risks • Verifiable storage will become economically valuable • Filecoin can evolve into a decentralized cloud platform • FIL will be required for collateral, payments and network operations • Real usage will eventually replace subsidy-driven growth The bear case is equally clear: Cheap centralized cloud remains easier to use, Filecoin capacity stays underutilized and FIL issuance and provider selling overwhelm organic token demand. Filecoin has already proven that it can build supply. Now it must prove that it can build a business economy. That is the entire investment thesis. Do not evaluate Filecoin only by its price or total capacity. Watch paid demand, recurring customers, retrieval, provider profitability, token locking, burning and application revenue. Those metrics will reveal whether Filecoin is becoming the infrastructure layer for the world’s data—or simply a massive storage network searching for enough customers. Filecoin does not need more empty hard drives. It needs valuable data, paying customers and sustainable demand for FIL. If that transition succeeds, FIL may be one of the most mispriced infrastructure assets in crypto. If it fails, technical scale alone will not protect investors. $FIL #Filecoin #DePIN #AI
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Nathaniel Greene (@dawn_berlitz21) reported@AmazonHelp unfortunately the item is beyond its return window ive been trying to tolerate its problems as long as i could
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PrinceLD Martian (@PrinceLDCharley) reported@AmazonHelp amazon flex support need 2 do better in support for drivers instead of disregarding drivers efforts & reliability when it comes 2 their app errors,glitches ,mistakes that impact drivers standings/eligibility that’s beyond a driver control with their terms of service.
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Hancock_Chance (@CHANCEDXR) reported@AmazonHelp It’s been an ongoing issue. Plus, when I spoke with a customer agent, the assured me it would be delivered, yesterday. Nothing. So, I canceled the order and will buy it locally to save time.
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Metal Face (@ProtoRoboto0939) reported@Chalil11221 @RedLReviews Wait woah slow down, Amazon is a multi billion dollar company they most certainly can afford to put more pay into the animation and hire all the celebrities they want for the voice acting and have it look mappa level all at the same time. They aren't indie.
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Elle Deguiser (@deguiselle) reportedhow is it possible that la Poste, dhl, Amazon deliver without a problem but @UPS notification says apartment number missing? It is a house for God’s sake! Only issue is your driver doesn’t want to drive up the driveway to get signature
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ravi (@ravialikkal) reportedNow Amazon India customer care is of no support. I contacted due to a defective product issue through chat. One will ask all details and leave the chat. Another joins and then leaves the chat. Yesterday 7 or 8 executives joined the chat and left without any resolution @amazonIN
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Priyatosh Pandit (@PriyatoshPandit) reported@amazonIN @amazon @AmazonHelp Please don’t become a Prime member of Amazon if you expect reliable customer support. In my experience, they have shown no sense of responsibility for customer issues. Instead of resolving problems, they keep making excuses while customers are left waiting. Very disappointing.
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June (@JuneBugJune35) reported@DreaHumphrey Twice I wiped down all my groceries and Amazon packages. Can’t believe I fell for it
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Elle Deguiser (@deguiselle) reported@UPS how is it possible that la Poste, dhl, Amazon deliver without a problem but your notification says apartment number missing? It is a house for God’s sake! Only issue is your driver doesn’t want to drive up the driveway to get signature
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Saurabh Gupta (@saurabh_yajush) reported@AmazonHelp You keep asking me to “follow up with the Specialist Team,”but the Specialist Team is not providing any facts, evidence, or a proper explanation. Repeating the same response does not resolve the issue. Please share the basis of your decision and provide a fair escalation process