Amazon Web Services
Amazon Web Services is the largest public-cloud platform, hosting a vast share of the internet’s applications and infrastructure. ScanMalware infers AWS from IP and ASN ownership and from service-specific headers across S3, CloudFront, ELB and EC2.
AWS hosts both legitimate enterprises and abuse: throwaway instances and buckets are routinely used for phishing and malware staging. Hosting on AWS is therefore a neutral fact — the verdict comes from the scanned page.
Commonly deployed alongside Amazon Web Services
Of the 20,855 public scans where Amazon Web Services was detected, these are the technologies most often present on the same site. The share is the percentage of Amazon Web Services sites that also ran each one.
| Technology | Category | Share of Amazon Web Services sites |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon CloudFront | wappalyzer | 67.28% |
| Amazon S3 | wappalyzer | 36.87% |
| HSTS | wappalyzer | 35.28% |
| Google Analytics | wappalyzer | 19.11% |
| Open-Graph-Protocol | miscellaneous | 18.46% |
| Google Tag Manager | wappalyzer | 18.05% |
| HTTP/3 | wappalyzer | 16.83% |
| X-UA-Compatible | miscellaneous | 14.12% |
| jQuery | wappalyzer | 13.84% |
| Amazon ELB | wappalyzer | 12.95% |
| Cloudflare | wappalyzer | 12.88% |
| Script | miscellaneous | 12.56% |
| PoweredBy | miscellaneous | 12.14% |
| JQuery | miscellaneous | 9.75% |
How ScanMalware detects Amazon Web Services
Amazon Web Services is detected by analysing the response headers, HTML markup, JavaScript runtime and asset URLs captured when ScanMalware loads the site in a real headless browser.
From any scan you can pivot into related signals — JARM TLS fingerprints, ASN ownership and BGP routing, certificate history, JavaScript analysis and the overall security verdict — to understand not just that Amazon Web Services is present, but how it is being used. Open the full search interface for Amazon Web Services →
Recent public scans featuring Amazon Web Services
A rolling sample of recent public scans where Amazon Web Services was detected. Listing a site here is not a safety judgement — open a scan to see its full verdict.
| Site | Scanned |
|---|---|
| Erste Bank Hungary Zrt. - Magánszemélyek https://www.erstebank.hu | 2026-06-19 |
| https://datadome.raileurope.com | 2026-06-19 |
| Able by Bullhorn | Bullhorn https://ableteams.com | 2026-06-19 |
| Texas Health Brand Portal https://texashealth.bynder.com | 2026-06-19 |
| https://platform-cs-edge-jpn3.adobe.io | 2026-06-19 |
| events-api.monarch.com https://events-api.monarch.com | 2026-06-18 |
| https://assets-prod.ewebinar.com | 2026-06-18 |
| Association for Supply Chain Management https://mylearning.ascm.org | 2026-06-18 |
Frequently asked questions about Amazon Web Services
- Does using Amazon Web Services mean a website is unsafe?
- No. Amazon Web Services is a stack component, not a verdict. ScanMalware scores the whole page — its scripts, redirects, certificates, threat-intelligence matches and behaviour — so a site using Amazon Web Services can be perfectly safe or actively malicious.
- How many sites using Amazon Web Services has ScanMalware scanned?
- Amazon Web Services has been detected in 20,855 public scans on ScanMalware.com. Each scan is a real headless-browser visit, and the figure updates as new URLs are submitted.
- What technologies are commonly used with Amazon Web Services?
- Across scanned sites, Amazon Web Services is most often seen alongside Amazon CloudFront, Amazon S3 and HSTS. The full co-occurrence breakdown is listed on this page.
Browse all profiled technologies on the technology index, or scan a URL to see its full stack.