Friday, July 19th 2024
Faulty Windows Update from CrowdStrike Hits Banks and Airlines Around the World
A faulty software update to enterprise computers by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike has taken millions of computers offline, most of which are in a commercial or enterprise environment, or are Azure deployments. CrowdStrike provides periodic software and security updates to commercial PCs, enterprise PCs, and cloud instances, with a high degree of automation. The latest update reportedly breaks the Windows bootloader, causing bluescreens of death (BSODs), and if configured, invokes Windows Recovery. Enterprises tend to bulletproof the bootloaders of their client machines, and disable generic Windows Recovery tools from Microsoft, which means businesses around the world are left with large numbers of machines that will each take manual fixing. The so-called "Windows CrowdStrike BSOD deluge" has hit critical businesses such as banks, airlines, supermarket chains, and TV broadcasters. Meanwhile, sysadmins on Reddit are wishing each other a happy weekend.
Source:
The Verge
234 Comments on Faulty Windows Update from CrowdStrike Hits Banks and Airlines Around the World
Feels like just about the only place not impacted was my workplace :fear:
Microsoft's 365 platform is also having a bit of a wobble due to a seemingly unrelated issue with a configuration SNAFU in Azure. The whole point of providers like Crowdstrike is that part of the service fee is for them to do that verification, so that you don't have to. Without such providers, small companies with minimal IT departments couldn't exist.
First time? . jpg
It's going to be a loooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooong day for those in bigger organizations!
I checked serveral Windows 10 installations at work incl. the one I use at work and I haven't found anything and a lot of my customers are running Windows 11 so hope they are more safe than Windows 10 users. Correct.
... lets ruin everyones day because of a "online bug" ....
I bet IT people will be creating better recovery drives/discs after this blunder. I wonder if they heard of a thing called, QA.
"this wouldnt have happened if AI did all the work"
Having client PCs go offline may not be surprising, but seeing banks, traders, airlines, media companies etc., having their central services being offline from an update, that's just ridiculous. Come on guys, it's not 1995 any more, this level of incompetence isn't excusable. If you're making billions you can afford having properly trained staff and a properly managed tech "stack" with whatever appropriate failovers, backups, recovery images/procedures, etc. is needed to ensure reliability and security.
And yes, Microsoft certainly deserves blame for how easily their systems break, and for how tedious it is to roll back.
Thanks to CrowdStrike for accidentally revealing which companies who doesn't know how to handle their tech.
I don’t want this to be last thing I see before I die.
This seems the mentality that lets CEO's that make a complete hash of it, the very thing they are paid WAY TOO MUCH for, leave with a "golden handshake".