New – Block Public Sharing of Amazon EBS Snapshots

You now have the ability to disable public sharing of new, and optionally existing, Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) snapshots on a per-region, per-account basis. This provides you with another level of protection against accidental or inadvertent data leakage. EBS Snapshot Review You have had the power to create EBS snapshots since the launch of EBS in 2008, and have been able to share them privately or publicly since 2009. The vast majority of snapshots are kept private and are used for periodic backups, data migration, and disaster recovery. Software vendors use public snapshots to share trial-use software and test data. Block Public Sharing EBS snapshots have always been private by default, with the option to make individual snaps…

New for Amazon Comprehend – Toxicity Detection

With Amazon Comprehend, you can extract insights from text without being a machine learning expert. Using its built-in models, Comprehend can analyze the syntax of your input documents and find entities, events, key phrases, personally identifiable information (PII), and the overall sentiment or sentiments associated with specific entities (such as brands or products). Today, we are adding the capability to detect toxic content. This new capability helps you build safer environments for your end users. For example, you can use toxicity detection to improve the safety of applications open to external contributions such as comments. When using generative AI, toxicity detection can be used to check the input prompts and the output responses from large language models (LLMs). You can…

New – Manage Planned Lifecycle Events on AWS Health

We are announcing new features in AWS Health to help you manage planned lifecycle events for your AWS resources and dynamically track the completion of actions that your team takes at the resource-level to ensure continued smooth operations of your applications. Some examples of planned lifecycle events are an Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) Kubernetes version end of standard support, Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) certificate rotations, and end of support for other open source software, to name a few. These features include: The ability to dynamically track the completion of actions at the resource level where possible, to minimize disruption to applications. Timely visibility into upcoming planned lifecycle events, using notifications at least 90 days in advance…