Amazon down

Amazon Down: U.S. Website Experiences Temporary Outage – Variety Possible problems at Amazon Amazon is an online store which sells both physical as well as digital goods. Amazon also develops the Kindle, which is available as an e-book reader as well as a tablet computer. Amazon Web Services is a provider of cloud computing services. last 24 hours success Thanks for submitting a report! Your report was successfully submitted.

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- , Cookie Consent Tool, cookie . cookie.Cookie Consent Amazon product pages went down today in a rare outage - The Verge Amazon.com Server Status CheckAmazonWebsite Name:www.amazon.comURL Checked:Response Time:Last Down:Checking AmazonPlease wait while we check the server...JavaScript is required. Please enable JavaScript in your browser.

Amazon Website Status HistoryThe above graph displays service status activity for Amazon.com over the last 10 automatic checks. The blue bar displays the response time, which is better when smaller. If no bar is displayed for a specific time it means that the service was down and the site was offline.

Service Status History

DateTimePing TimeDateTimePing Time28.May.2020 23:1112.94 ms.29.May.2020 01:1113.57 ms.29.May.2020 03:1214.78 ms.29.May.2020 05:13 5.07 ms.29.May.2020 07:215.13 ms.29.May.2020 09:225.51 ms.29.May.2020 11:2713.48 ms.29.May.2020 13:2811.68 ms.29.May.2020 15:28 5.16 ms.29.May.2020 17:295.25 ms.* Times displayed are PT, Pacific Time (UTC/GMT 0) | Current server time is 17:41

We have tried pinging Amazon website using our server and the website returned the above results. If amazon.com is down for us too there is nothing you can do except waiting. Probably the server is overloaded, down or unreachable because of a network problem, outage or a website maintenance is in progress...

Can't Access Amazon - Troubleshooting InstructionsIf the site is UP but you cant access the page, try one of the below solutions:

Browser Related Problems

Force a full refresh for the site. This can be achieved by pressing CTRL + F5 keys at the same time on your favourite browser (Firefox, Chrome, Explorer, etc.)

Clear the temporary cache and cookies on your browser to make sure that you have the most recent version of the web page. For instructions choose your browser :

Fix DNS Problems

A Domain Name System (DNS) allows a site IP address (192.168.x.x) to be identified with words (*.com) in order to be remembered more easily, like a phonebook for websites. This service is usually provided by your ISP.

Clear your local DNS cache to make sure that you grab the most recent cache that your ISP has. For Windows - (Start > Command Prompt > type "ipconfig /flushdns" and hit enter). For details choose your operating system :

If you can access a website at office or from a 3G network yet it's not working on your computer, it is a good idea to use an alternative DNS service other than your ISPs. or are both excellent and free public DNS services.

Check our help page for step-by-step instructions on .

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Rate Amazon Amazon.com has been rated 3.3 out of 5 points. A total of 475 votes cast and 1518 users reviewed the website.

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Isitdownrightnow.com helps you find whether the website you are trying to browse is down or not. Check if the website is down just for you or everyone around the globe. All you have to do is type the name of the website you want to check and a fresh site status test will be performed on the domain name in real time using our online website checker tool. Isitdownrightnow.com is not affiliated with or endorsed by the services monitored on this web site.Š 2012-2020 isitdownrightnow.com | | Amazon down on Prime Day - Business Insider The best selection of multicultural and social justice books for children, YA, and educators.



“Amazon’s business practices are scorched-earth capitalism.” —author Dennis Lehane

Amazon is a destructive force in the world of bookselling. Their business practices undermine the ability of independent bookstores—and therefore access to independent, progressive, and multicultural literature—to survive. Additionally, Amazon is harmful to local economies, labor, and the publishing world.

Cheap books aren’t always a bargain “The Amazon model: easy salability, heavy marketing, super-competitive pricing, then trash and replace… Every book purchase made from Amazon is a vote for a culture without content and without contentment.” —author Ursula K. LeGuin

Tax evasion means less funding for communities—including education Working in an Amazon warehouse literally means working in a sweatshop Amazon’s Pennsylvania warehouses get so hot in summer months that Amazon keeps ambulances outside of the buildings to rush employees to the hospital. Employees must keep a brutal production pace even during heat waves or they risk being terminated. (Read more: ).

Kindles are corrupt

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ACTION ITEMS Authors: When promoting your book, use links to independent bookstores, like , instead of linking to Amazon.

Professors: Encourage your students to buy their classroom texts from independent bookstores.

Teachers and Librarians: If your school has a budget for book purchases, use a local, independent bookstore instead a large wholesaler or Amazon. It teaches your students the importance of supporting the local economy while giving a boost to an independent bookseller.

Book Buyers and Bookstore Lovers: Call your state/local politicians and urge them to collect sales tax from Amazon, put the revenues into improving school facilities, and increase teacher pay. Most importantly, use your book budget to support independent bookstores and their web stores.

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> 1/ Hundreds of us decided to stand up to our employer, Amazon. We are scared. But we decided we couldn’t live with ourselves if we let a policy silence us in the face of an issue of such moral gravity like the climate crisis.

— Amazon Employees For Climate Justice (@AMZNforClimate)





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The Washington Post | January 26, 2020 by Jay Greene — More than 350 Amazon staffers publicly called out the company for its climate policy, its work with federal agencies and its attempts to stifle dissent. .



Athena: Delivering Democracy Athena is a broad coalition of local and national organizations representing working people, small business people, people of color, immigrants, and neighbors, along with activists, advocates, policy experts, and academics. .



The Intercept | December 2, 2019 by H. Claire Brown — Earlier this year a falling object struck a worker’s head at an Amazon fulfillment center in Robbinsville, New Jersey… According to company protocol, Amazon’s medical staff should have sent the worker to a hospital or doctor’s office for further evaluation, or at least called a physician for advice. They did neither. .

More Articles by Scott Shane, the New York Times | November 30, 2019

by Sam Biddle, The Intercept | November 26, 2019

by Will Evans, The Atlantic | November 25, 2019

by Danny Caine A zine that includes “a letter to @JeffBezos from a small independent bookstore in the middle of the country,” as well as “several strategies to deal with Amazon’s continuing overreach.”

by Franklin Foer, The Atlantic | November 2019

by Michael Sainato, The Guardian | October 18, 2019

by David Streitfield, the New York Times | June 23, 2019

by the Washingtonian | June 16, 2019

by the New York Times | May 8, 2019

by Civic Economics | 2019 Report

by Matthew Gardner, Just Taxes blog | February 13, 2019

by James W. Loewen | November 20, 2018

by Democracy Now | November 14, 2018

by Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone | November 14, 2018

by Indiebound

by John Logan, TruthOut | June 23, 2018

by Gethin Chamberlain, The Guardian | June 9 ,2018

by Olivia Solon and Julia Carrie Wong, The Guardian | April 24, 2018

by Thomas Frank, The Guardian | April 7, 2018

by Nicole Karlis, Salon | January 9, 2018

by Dan Warburton, Mirror | December 10, 2017

by Adam Johnson, FAIR | July 28, 2017

by Jim Hightower, Common Dreams | July 16, 2017

by Stacy Mitchell, Motherboard | June 25, 2017

by Kenny Brechner, ShelfTalker | January 5, 2017

by Institue for Local Self Reliance | November 2016

by Bradley Graham and Lissa Muscatine, Politics and Prose | February 2016

by American Booksellers Association | February 2016

by the The New York Times | August 15, 2015

by Ursula K. Le Guin | June 1, 2015

| December, 2014 Salon explored the connection between Amazon and the CIA–Amazon has a $600 million contract to build a cloud computing service for the spy agency–and the wider “national security state.” Salon noted Amazon’s decision to toss Wikileaks from its servers in 2010, and said of the CIA deal: “On Amazon’s servers will be information on millions of people that the intelligence community has no right to possess…. Instead of helping expose U.S. war crimes, then, Amazon’s cloud service could be used to facilitate them, for which it will be paid handsomely–which was, in all likelihood, the whole point of the company proving itself a good corporate citizen by disassociating itself from an organization that sought to expose its future clients in the intelligence community.”

by Alan Cantor | December 1, 2014 On his , nonprofit consultant Alan Cantor debated the value of organizations participating in Amazon Smile, the program under which nonprofits receive 0.5% of Amazon purchases made by their supporters. Noting the “immoral” company’s poor labor policy, tax avoidance tradition and the Hachette dispute, Cantor concluded by highlighting the low return–in a variety of ways–of participating in Amazon Smile: “Let’s say that over the holidays [a nonprofit’s supporters] purchase $25,000 worth of goods from Amazon–purchases that otherwise would have been made at local stores that your neighbors own and where taxpaying members of your community work. That $25,000 would have been a lot of income for those local stores, perhaps the difference between survival and closure, or keeping staff members or firing them. But you’ve thrown your lot in with Amazon. And in return you will get a kick-back of… $125. Yes, that’s all that half of 1% of $25,000 amounts to.”

| June 5, 2014

| February, 2014

| January 22, 2014

MintPress News | December 26, 2013

Harper’s Magazine | December, 2013

| August 7, 2013

| July 30, 2013

by Andy Patrizio | Technology Guide | August 15, 2018

| May 31, 2012

The Authors Guild | | February 16, 2012

Ann Patchett interview by Steven Colbert | The Colbert Report | February 16, 2012 Novelist Ann Patchett discusses the importance of brick-and-mortar bookstores and explains what prompted her to open Parnassus Books in Nashville.

Op-ed by Richard Russo | The New York Times | December 12, 2011

The Morning Call | February 24, 2012 “When you order a book from Amazon.com, do you know why it’s so cheap and arrives so fast? Because employees at an Amazon warehouse are literally working in a sweatshop. Details emerged last week of working conditions so horrendous that Amazon keeps an ambulance parked outside.”

by David Cohen | Politics & Prose Bookstore Blog (D.C.) | August 11, 2011

by Verne G. Kopytoff | New York Times | March 13, 2011

Open Letter to Amazon.com by Daniel Ellsberg | | December 3, 2010

by Onnesha Roychoudhuri | Boston Review | Nov./Dec. 2010

An online archive to educate consumers about the problems and politics of doing business with the beast.

by Benedicte Page | guardian.co.uk | Jan. 5, 2011

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