When your cloud goes down, it's not just an inconvenience—it's potentially millions of dollars walking out the door. That's the reality driving Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) and Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) (GOOG) to do something fairly unusual: work together.
Multicloud Connections in Minutes, Not Weeks
The two tech giants announced a new multicloud networking service on Sunday that fundamentally changes how businesses connect different cloud platforms. Instead of waiting weeks to establish private, high-speed links between Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud, customers can now get it done in minutes.
This matters because we live in an era where even brief internet hiccups can cascade into full-blown outages. The service combines AWS Interconnect-multicloud with Google Cloud's Cross-Cloud Interconnect, creating what the companies hope will be a more resilient approach to network interoperability. AWS isn't stopping there either—they're planning to partner with Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) Azure later in 2026, presumably bringing the same capabilities to that platform.
Robert Kennedy, Vice President of Network Services at AWS, called the collaboration a "fundamental shift in multicloud connectivity." Rob Enns, Vice President and General Manager of Cloud Networking at Google Cloud, framed it as simplifying how companies move data and applications between clouds. Translation: less time wrestling with infrastructure, more time actually running your business.
Google Cloud disclosed that Salesforce Inc. (CRM) is among the early adopters testing this new approach, which gives you a sense of the scale we're talking about here.
Why This Collaboration Matters Now
The timing isn't coincidental. Amazon suffered a major AWS outage last October caused by what they described as a rare software bug in one of their critical systems. That single incident affected over 1,000 websites and services, serving as an expensive reminder that even the most robust infrastructure has vulnerabilities.
AWS operates an enormous network spanning more than 900 data centers across over 50 countries. Beyond that, the division maintains server racks in hundreds of colocation facilities, which provided roughly 20% of AWS's total computing power in 2024. That infrastructure is generating serious revenue: AWS posted 20% year-over-year growth to $33 billion, its fastest pace since 2022. For context, that's more than twice Google Cloud's $15.16 billion.
Google Cloud has been building momentum though, with its annual revenue run rate already surpassing $50 billion. The company sees this multicloud service as a way to attract customers who need reliable, efficient cloud networking without vendor lock-in anxiety. When businesses can move seamlessly between platforms, they're less worried about putting all their eggs in one basket.
The Bigger Picture
What we're really seeing here is acknowledgment that the future of enterprise computing isn't about choosing one cloud provider—it's about using multiple clouds strategically. Companies want the best features from different providers without sacrificing performance or spending weeks on integration projects.
By making multicloud connectivity faster and easier, Amazon and Google are essentially betting that the market for cloud services grows larger when customers aren't forced to pick sides. It's a surprisingly cooperative move in an industry known for cutthroat competition, but it makes sense when you realize that making the overall cloud ecosystem more reliable probably benefits everyone involved.
The real test will be whether this service actually delivers on its promise when the next major disruption hits. Because in cloud computing, you're only as good as your uptime during the worst moments.