A major Amazon Web Services (AWS) outage on October 20 had the unexpected side 
effect of causing chaos in bedrooms across the US, as owners of Eight Sleep’s 
$2,000+ ‘Pod’ mattress covers found their smart beds had no offline mode and 
were stuck at high temperatures and odd positions in the night.

The outage began around 3 am ET, when AWS reported “increased error rates and 
latencies” in its US-EAST-1 region. By mid-morning, Downdetector had logged 
more than eight million reports of disruptions affecting apps, games, and 
banking platforms.

Eight Sleep’s products rely on cloud connectivity to control temperature and 
track biometric data. When AWS went down, users lost access to the app that 
manages its water-cooled coils, leaving them stuck with whatever setting was 
last active.

Some beds overheated, others stopped cooling altogether, and several users said 
their devices became completely unresponsive.


One viral post from tech enthusiast Alex Browne summed up the absurdity after 
his Pod locked itself nine degrees above room temperature. “Backend outage 
means I’m sleeping in a sauna,” he wrote. “Eight Sleep confirmed there’s no 
offline mode yet, but they’re working on it.”

Another user explained their bed was stuck in an inclined position.


Some described the beds as being “bricked” and demanded a fallback option that 
works without an internet connection. The company has previously faced 
criticism over security flaws, including a 2024 report that found exposed AWS 
keys could have allowed remote access to customer devices.

AWS said normal operations were restored by around 6 am ET, with most affected 
services back online soon after.

CEO Matteo Franceschetti said, “We will work the whole night+24/7 to build an 
outage mode so the problem will be fixed extremely quickly.”

<https://www.dexerto.com/entertainment/aws-crash-causes-2000-smart-beds-to-overheat-and-get-stuck-upright-3272251/>

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