Microsoft resolves cloud outage that caused some US airlines to ground flights
Microsoft resolves cloud outage that caused some US airlines to ground flights

Major US carriers restore some flight operations amid global cyber outage

Microsoft resolves cloud outage that caused some US airlines to ground flights
Major US carriers restore some flight operations amid global cyber outage
Airlines relying on Windows.
Sometimes I do feel afraid.
Dude, every bit of critical infrastructure around you is running Windows XP and McAfee ePO. The shit hidden in segregated control networks would make a security researcher from 2009 cringe.
Clearly didn't resolve it that well considering that most of a continent is out now
Edit: world, not continent now
I am thrilled right now that our company only started relying on cloud resources a few years ago and still don't use services like this... I hope this is a wake-up call to them, so we never use something like this. I know the execs finally realized the cloud is not cost effective, and I hope we keep it a mixed bag instead of going in fully. I have been in IT for 18 years now, and thankfully, I have never had to deal with a disaster like this. Another close call was outsourcing our IT service desk to a company, and they wanted us to put agents on our pc's so they could do their job easier. Luckily, our network team said absolutely not. Sure enough, that same year at Christmas time, they got hit with a crypto attack, and instead of having to deal with the agents, we just shut down the tunnel, and we're fine. A lot of their clients were not so lucky. Screw the cloud and 3rd party services... it doesn't save what you think, and you get poor services in return a lot of the time.
Time to switch to alternatives
It isn't a Microsoft issue in the first place. Doesn't mean switching to alternatives isn't a good idea, but this one isn't on them for a change.
It's an argument for decentralization. An argument that won't be heeded.
In a way it is a Microsoft problem. Windows can't handle live updates to the system like Linux can. Security updates mean downtime to be scheduled. So they need a program to do security, so CrowdStrike comes in to do security for these companies since Microsoft can't protect them. And mistakes happen.
Incidentally CrowdStrike has a Linux agent and my previous company was pushing us to install it to check another box on their Cyberliability insurance form. So this could just as easy happen there too.
Alternatives😏
Security software is by and large theatre. There I said it.
Install TempleOS in your production environment I guarantee no one is writing viruses for that lol
It's a crowdstrike issue.
Ouch that's going to hurt the share price
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/CRWD/
Not enough... only down 8.9% and it even rebounded overnight...
Somebody's getting fired and that company is getting sued. I'm very curious how much this outage will have ended up costing the global economy.
This was a separate outage unrelated to CrowdStrike a few hours earlier that took down a couple of airlines as well.
A majority of the VMs in the Azure CentralUS datacenter went down due to some sort of backend storage issue.
Edit: I guess I should have read the article they do say CrowdStrike. They seem to be implying that they were one event when the cloud services outage was earlier and unrelated. I had heard about grounded flights during the first outage as well. So they likely are combining the two events here.