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Oracle, AWS just made multicloud networking less of a nightmare

Multicloud was never supposed to be this messy. Enterprises ended up spreading workloads across different cloud providers, sometimes by design, often just by accident, and the networking headaches that followed became a familiar story for IT teams. Oracle and AWS are now moving to address that directly, linking their respective interconnect services to create private, managed connectivity between Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and AWS environments.

The practical implication is significant. Teams that currently rely on third-party providers or manually stitched network configurations to move data between the two platforms will have a cleaner path forward. No public internet exposure, no brittle custom integrations, and considerably less time spent on infrastructure coordination that adds no real business value.

AI workloads are a big part of why this matters right now. Enterprises running machine learning pipelines increasingly store training data in one environment while handling inference in another. That split creates real performance friction, and slow or inconsistent connectivity between clouds compounds it quickly. Oracle positions this interconnect expansion as a direct answer to that problem, particularly for customers running its AI Database services inside AWS infrastructure.

The rollout starts in AWS’s US East region, which makes sense given the demand concentration there. How Oracle and AWS handle the expansion beyond that single region will determine how broadly useful this actually becomes. Data sovereignty requirements, regional availability, and regulatory constraints still vary considerably across markets, and those factors shape enterprise adoption as much as the underlying technology does.

There are honest trade-offs worth acknowledging. Tighter integration between two specific vendors simplifies operations in the short term, but it also deepens dependence on both ecosystems simultaneously. Finance teams already struggle with multicloud billing complexity, and adding another managed layer between providers introduces more variables to track. The networking problem gets easier while the cost visibility problem potentially gets harder.

None of that makes this a bad development. Most large enterprises already operate across multiple clouds and probably will for the foreseeable future. A managed, private connection between two of the most widely used platforms removes friction that has been genuinely costly in engineering time and operational risk. The direction this points toward is a cloud landscape that becomes incrementally easier to navigate, even if it never becomes entirely simple.

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