AWS Marketplace Integrates Chainlink Data Standards for Smart Contracts

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AWS Marketplace is integrating Chainlink’s data standards and services, enabling developers and enterprises to combine AWS compute, storage, database, and API infrastructure with smart contract capabilities, according to an announcement on Friday.

Chainlink Services Available on AWS

AWS users now have access to three key Chainlink services:

Data Feeds provides access to decentralized price and market data for valuations, settlements, and risk management. Data Streams is used to feed high-speed, low-latency data for real-time applications. Proof of Reserve is a crypto industry standard for attesting to the assets backing stablecoins and tokenized assets.

AWS and Chainlink Integration

Simon Goldberg, an AWS web3 specialist solutions architect, described the strategic value of the partnership: “AWS provides the foundational building blocks that financial institutions rely on, including compute, storage, and a comprehensive suite of cloud services. Chainlink’s oracle infrastructure extends these capabilities by providing secure, bidirectional connectivity between AWS resources and smart contracts deployed on blockchain networks.”

Goldberg added: “The availability of the Chainlink data standard on the AWS Marketplace allows developers to use familiar AWS services when building applications that interact with tokenized assets and smart contracts.”

Tokenization and Market Context

The move comes amid rising interest in tokenization, the process of representing real-world assets like real estate, bonds, and stocks onchain. Chainlink is one of the primary blockchain data services firms that links offchain data to blockchain applications using oracles, enabling tokenized assets to correspond to their real-world counterparts.

AWS’s Chainlink integration will allow institutions to use familiar AWS tools while connecting securely to blockchains and building hybrid applications that span traditional cloud and decentralized systems.

Competitive Landscape

Competition among oracles is intensifying. On Wednesday, Kalshi announced it was integrating blockchain data services provider Pyth to provide data for the prediction market’s Commodities Hub. Meanwhile, major data producers such as FTSE Russell, Deutsche Börse, S&P Global, and Coinbase signed deals to feed data to Chainlink’s DataLink, which could be used to support tokenized products.

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QueueJumpervip
· 04-28 07:15
At the same time as purchasing computing power/database resources in AWS, you can seamlessly integrate oracles and data standards, making the development process more streamlined.
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GateUser-fb035825vip
· 04-27 02:51
On Chainlink Marketplace, the barrier for enterprises to go on-chain is even lower.
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GateUser-b4b056d3vip
· 04-26 19:55
This move directly connects AWS with the blockchain, feeling great.
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MemeSourdoughvip
· 04-26 19:42
Link ecosystem receives another major endorsement; let's see if it will drive more traditional SaaS integrations.
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PfpArchaeologistvip
· 04-26 19:41
This is quite friendly for teams building Web2 + Web3 hybrid architectures, reducing the hassle of setting up numerous self-hosted nodes and data sources.
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ApyDaydreamervip
· 04-26 19:40
More concerned about pricing and compliance: Companies use AWS for billing, so how is on-chain calling billed?
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StakingDaydreamvip
· 04-26 19:37
Hopefully, it's not just the listing entry point; please also include enterprise requirements such as SLA, auditing, and permission management.
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VelvetValidatorvip
· 04-26 19:34
AWS's move is very practical: first lay out the toolchain, and applications will naturally follow.
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