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That’s a pretty bold claim. Where’s your data to back it up?

More importantly you appear to have misunderstood the scenario I’m trying to avoid, which is the precise situation we’ve seen in the past 24 hours where a very large proportion of internet services go down all at the same time precisely because they’re all using the same provider.

And then finally the usual outcome of increased competition is to improve the quality of products and services.

I am very aware of the WWII bomber story, because it’s very heavily cited in corporate circles nowadays, but I don’t see that it has anything to do with what I was talking about.

AWS is chosen because it’s an acceptable default that’s unlikely to be heavily challenged either by corporate leadership or by those on the production side because it’s good CV fodder. It’s the “nobody gets fired for buying IBM” of the early mid-21st century. That doesn’t make it the best choice though: just the easiest.

And viewed at a level above the individual organisation - or, perhaps from the view of users who were faced with failures across multiple or many products and services from diverse companies and organisations - as with today (yesterday!) we can see it’s not the best choice.



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