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ti_ranger | 5 years ago
There's most likely a reason for this.
Like, maybe in the past AWS customers have tried claiming for SLA credits for incidents that didn't impact them, in order to reduce their bill.
ti_ranger | 5 years ago
There's most likely a reason for this.
Like, maybe in the past AWS customers have tried claiming for SLA credits for incidents that didn't impact them, in order to reduce their bill.
rexreed|5 years ago
The mechanism can be really simple. If AWS themselves posts an outage to their status page and/or some third-party service posts an outage then credits are immediately applied to the services where there are outages for those that paid for high level uptime guarantees without requiring any claims process. It can easily be done if they want to do it that way.
Of course from a business perspective I understand why they're doing it the way that they are. If they can make customers jump through hoops, then only those who really care will follow through. Meanwhile the uptime guarantee can continue as an empty promise.
unknown|5 years ago
[deleted]
Silhouette|5 years ago
Griffinsauce|5 years ago
Also: requiring your customers to ask for their money back when you know that you didn't deliver the service promised and all other billing is automated.. come on.