"We know that many of our customers, including a multitude of teams within
Amazon, are using S3 in mission-critical ways and need a formal commitment from
us in order to make commitments to their own users and customers," said Jeff
Barr, services evangelist at Amazon, on a
company
blog.
The
Amazon
S3 Service Level Agreement guarantees an uptime of 99.9 per cent. Customers
will be issued a 10 per cent credit if system availability falls below 99.9 per
cent, and a 25 per cent credit if it falls below 99 per cent.
A downtime of 0.1 per cent per month represents a system crash for 45 minutes
based on a 31-day month. Mission critical systems typically require 99.999 per
cent uptime, or no more than 27 seconds downtime per month.
Business writer Nicholas Carr suggested that the Amazon S3 SLA illustrates
the advantage of hosted services over in-house IT.
"Utilities will compete directly with one another on critical performance
standards, like reliability and security, as well as pricing," Carr wrote on his
Rough
Type blog.
"That competition promises rapidly to drive up standards and push down prices
to the benefit of the utilities' customers."
In house IT, by comparison, lacks a direct competitor to drive improvements.
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