This week here are AWS summits all over Europe. It's a good time to show up wherever AWS representatives stand and ask questions about this initiative, maybe give them some praise (may help their little hearts to hue slightly less black). And ask about IAM, and about legal guaranties, and if it comes to that, what (legal and otherwise) remedies are in place for breach of European regulations by USA authorities.
A particular question I'll ask is if they see tariffs potentially increasing the price of their services both in USA and worldwide. After all, if tariffs make goods more expensive in USA, that could propagate to the services they export.
I'm not an expert on trade and tariffs, but my basic understanding from is that tariffs only apply to goods that cross borders. At the moment, most customers outside of the US have experienced a decrease in price because the dollar has lost strength. Most cloud services are priced in dollars.
At AWS it runs really deep that we don't increase prices. We're like Costco with the hot dog. I've been amazed at the lengths we've gone to over the last few years. As all of our fundamental costs like energy, land, salaries, have experienced inflation globally, we've prioritized cost-savings and efficiency programs that meant we haven't had to pass that on as price increases. We did introduce a new fixed-price for IPv4 addresses, but it's not a significant charge for most customers and is just driven by the finite and now dwindling availability of IPv4 addresses.
A particular question I'll ask is if they see tariffs potentially increasing the price of their services both in USA and worldwide. After all, if tariffs make goods more expensive in USA, that could propagate to the services they export.