One of the largest things i am learning from these stories (Tangentially Wikipedia story too) is to have backups outside of your own infrastructure with snapshots at 15 minute recovery time preferably when possible
For context it was 2.5 years of data. I can only just imagine the nightmare if things would've turned out even a tiny bit more worse for ya. The nightmare it would've been if snapshot of the production database wouldn't have been found even within the AWS business support.
> I was overly reliant on my Claude Code agent, which accidentally wiped all production infrastructure for the DataTalks.Club course management platform that stored data for 2.5 years of all submissions: homework, projects, leaderboard entries, for every course run through the platform.
Wise, but for those with large databases, factoring in the price of egress is important, as it gets price ($0.09 for each GB over 100GB, and that 100GB free tier is spread across your entire AWS workload)
I understand this but maybe its my personal preference but I prefer working with services which don't charge money for egress/charge very little. So think OVH,netcup,Scaleway,BuyVM,Upcloud and Hetzner and so many others.
So to me, its an non issue. But I definitely understand your point yea if someone's locked in AWS then egress can be brutal, but to me that's even more the reason to not use AWS (Also that usually these services that I have listed are more price effective/better too and most of these companies have decent human support and some/most provide decent SLA guarantees as well and most importantly, with all of this, I would love to support non AWS/GCP/Azure clouds and wish for a less centralized internet anyway)
So its actually a win-win for me to not have to worry about egress costs.
Of course. We are also evaluating our own cloud exit strategy. The original article was about and by an org on AWS, so I was going for an apples-to-apples analysis.
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