Story misunderstands DynamoDb secondary indexes
For anyone who cares, DynamoDB local secondary indexes and global secondary indexes have nothing to do with single datacentre and multiple datacentre indexes.
A dynamoDb table primary key consists of a hashkey - which determines how the records or 'items' are distributed across the infrastructure's servers, and an optional rangekey which, if present, is associated with an index local effectively to a specific server* identified by the hashkey. (*That's the right way to think of it, even if there are multiple replicas)
A Dynamo local secondary index (LSI) allows you to create another index on a table, but it only allows you to drill down to data which all has the same hashkey, as it runs only at the server level. So if I had a table 'peopleMessages' whose hashkey was email address and rangekey was the creation date of the message, I could use the default table index to sort by creation date only. If I add an LSI to attribute 'messageTitle', then I could also search for a message from a specific person by message title - but not for a specific title from any person - well not with the schema above)
A Dynamo global secondary index (GSI) is basically just a wholly new table which you can use to search through data in the associated table no matter what the hashkeys. It's not that different from simply creating your own indexing table, other than Dynamo automatically sorts out the synchronisation of the original table and any other indexes for you, loosens certain constraints (e.g. in a GSI, there can be multiple items which have the same hashkey value), and helps you manage the costs by allowing you to provision the throughput and control which values are 'projected' into the GSI.
In essence, local secondary indexes apply at the server level, only allow you to pick through data that shares the same hashkey, and use of them counts against the provisioned throughput of the table they belong to, whereas global secondary indexes are 'cross server', allowing your to pick through data in a table no matter what the hashkey, and, as behind the scenes they're just tables, the index has to have its own provisioned throughput.
It's all explained in detail for those who haven't been bored to death already here:
Local Secondary Indexes:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/LSI.html
Global Secondary Indexes:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/amazondynamodb/latest/developerguide/GSI.html