Imagine waking up at 4:00 AM — not because of a baby crying, or your alarm clock, or even a thunderstorm — but because your $5,000 mattress decided it was time for a full-body heat trap and a surprise incline. Oh, and let’s not forget the blinking lights and vibrating alerts just for good measure.
No, this isn’t a sci-fi movie gone wrong. It’s real. It happened. And it happened because a chunk of the internet just… broke.
For a few hours Monday morning, the digital backbone of modern life — Amazon Web Services — flatlined. A simple DNS error (basically, the internet forgot where to go) sent shockwaves through everything from banking apps to gaming platforms to fitness tech. But here’s the twist: it wasn’t your bank account or your online game character that had the most dramatic meltdown. It was your mattress.
Eight Sleep, a luxury “smart” bed company, found itself at the center of a very 2025 kind of chaos. The kind where technology, marketed as your personal sleep assistant, turns into a malfunctioning robot with absolutely no chill… literally.
Customers who’d invested thousands into the promise of perfect sleep were instead jolted awake by beds that wouldn’t flatten, wouldn’t cool down, and in some cases decided to party with alarms and flashing lights — all thanks to a hiccup at AWS.
But it’s not just about uncomfortable sleep.
It’s about the creeping realization that our daily routines, comforts, and even basic human needs — like sleep — are now locked into the hands of cloud-based companies. And when those clouds glitch, there’s no umbrella big enough.
Let’s pause for a second: What happens when something bigger goes down? What if this isn’t just about a mattress locking up or your Peloton class going offline? What if it’s your home security system? Your smart car? Your bank?
That’s the real wake-up call.
This whole incident peeled back the curtain on a truth too many of us have ignored: we’re not just customers anymore. We’re data points, cloud dependents, subscription junkies hooked on convenience. Want to adjust the temperature on your bed? That’ll be a $399 subscription. Want it to actually work when the internet hiccups? Well, maybe next time.
And here’s the part that gets under your skin: these outages aren’t just bugs in the system. They’re reminders of how fragile this whole structure really is.
Alan Woodward, a professor of computing, put it plainly — the more complex we make these systems, the more likely they are to fail. These aren’t bulletproof machines. They’re a tangled mess of servers, signals, and software strung together with the hope that everything goes right.
But when it doesn’t? Your $5,000 “smart” bed doesn’t know how to sleep dumb.
Beds were not meant to require internet connection.
During the AWS US-EAST outage on October 20th, people flooded the internet complaining about their smart beds from EightSleep
Because of the AWS outage, the smart beds were unable to recline or change positions. Additionally,… pic.twitter.com/dFwWaWNgkn
— vx-underground (@vxunderground) October 22, 2025
Amazon chalked it up to a DNS issue — basically, a digital blindfold. The devices, left without a server to talk to, panicked. They didn’t know how to fail quietly. So instead, they freaked out — dragging their owners into the chaos with them.
Eight Sleep’s CEO, Matteo Franceschetti, posted a public apology. Engineers are apparently working on an “outage-proof mode,” but let’s be honest… the damage is done. Trust has been shaken, and a lot of folks are wondering what they actually paid for.
And here’s the kicker: with the world marching further toward smart homes, smart beds, and smart everything, the question isn’t if this will happen again. It’s when.
So yeah, maybe laugh about it now. A mattress with stage lights and a surprise incline is funny… until it’s not.
Because one cloud hiccup and suddenly you’re not just out of a good night’s sleep — you’re out of control.
And that’s the part they don’t put in the brochure.