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Matt Burgess
Security
Jul 19, 2024 4:40 AM


HUGE MICROSOFT OUTAGE CAUSED BY CROWDSTRIKE TAKES DOWN COMPUTERS AROUND THE
WORLD

A software update from cybersecurity company CrowdStrike inadvertently disrupted
IT systems globally—taking Windows machines offline.
PHOTO-ILLUSTRATION: WIRED STAFF; GETTY IMAGES

Save this storySave
Save this storySave

Banks, airports, TV stations, health care organizations, hotels, and countless
other businesses are all facing widespread IT outages, leaving flights grounded
and causing widespread disruption, after Windows machines have displayed errors
worldwide.




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In the early hours of Friday, companies in Australia running Microsoft’s Windows
operating system started reporting devices showing Blue Screens of Death
(BSODs). Shortly after, reports of disruptions started flooding in from around
the world, including from the UK, India, Germany, the Netherlands, and the US:
TV station Sky News went offline, and US airlines United, Delta, and American
Airlines issued a “global ground stop” on all flights.



The widespread Windows outages have been linked to a software update from
cybersecurity giant CrowdStrike. It is believed the issues are not linked to a
malicious cyberattack, cybersecurity officials say, but rather stem from a
misconfigured/corrupted update that CrowdStrike pushed out to its customers.



“Earlier today, a CrowdStrike update was responsible for bringing down a number
of IT systems globally," said a Microsoft spokesperson in a statement. "We are
actively supporting customers to assist in their recovery.”

Engineers from CrowdStrike posted to the company’s Reddit forum that it has seen
“widespread reports of BSODs on Windows hosts” occurring across its software, is
working on the problem, and has advised a workaround for impacted systems. It
also issued instructions to its customers in an advisory.

The incident has only impacted devices running Windows and not other operating
systems. It's unclear exactly how widespread the issues are and how long they
will take to resolve.



Hours after the issues started to emerge, CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz issued a
statement about the outages, saying the company has found a “defect” in an
update for Windows that it issued. “This is not a security incident or
cyberattack,” Kurtz said. “The issue has been identified, isolated, and a fix
has been deployed.” In the statement, Kurtz confirmed that Mac and Linux hosts
are not impacted by the update and said that its customers should refer to its
support portal. He later apologized for the incident during a television
interview.

At the same time as the CrowdStrike issues emerged, Microsoft was also dealing
with its own, apparently unrelated, outage of its Azure cloud services. The
company says the two incidents are not linked.

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The widespread Windows outages have been linked to a software update from
cybersecurity giant CrowdStrike. It is believed the issues are not linked to a
malicious cyberattack, cybersecurity officials say, but rather stem from a
misconfigured/corrupted update that CrowdStrike pushed out to its customers.

The outages could result in “millions” being lost by organizations impacted who
have had to halt their operations or stop business, says Lukasz Olejnik, an
independent cybersecurity consultant, who says the CrowdStrike update appears to
be linked to its Falcon Sensor product. The Falcon system is part of
CrowdStrike’s security tools and can block attacks on systems, according to the
company.

“It reminds us about our dependence on IT and software,” Olejnik says. “When a
system has several software systems maintained by various vendors, this is
equivalent to placing trust on them. They may be a single point of failure—like
here, when various firms feel the impact.”

The outage stemming from the CrowdStrike update has had a huge knock-on impact
on public services and businesses around the world. Scores of airports are
facing delays and long queues, with one passenger in India sharing a
hand-written boarding pass that they have been issued. In the hours after the
outages first emerged, more than 4,000 flights around the world have been
canceled, although not all of them may have been directly linked to the
disruption.

How One Bad CrowdStrike Update Crashed the World’s Computers
A defective CrowdStrike update sent computers around the globe into a reboot
death spiral, taking down air travel, hospitals, banks, and more with it. Here’s
how that’s possible.
By Lily Hay Newman, Matt Burgess, and Andy Greenberg

Within health care and emergency services, various medical providers around the
world have reported issues with their Windows-linked systems, sharing news on
social media or their own websites. The US Emergency Alert System, which issues
hurricane warnings, said that there had been various 911 outages in a number of
states. In Portland, mayor Ted Wheeler declared a city emergency as a result of
some of the outages, although also said many systems were being restored. White
House officials say president Joe Biden has been "briefed" on the CrowdStrike
outages and his team is monitoring the situation.

Germany’s University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein said it was canceling some
nonurgent surgeries at two locations. In Israel, more than a dozen hospitals
have been impacted, as well as pharmacies, with reports saying ambulances have
been rerouted to unimpacted medical organizations.

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In the UK, NHS England has confirmed that GP appointment and patient record
systems have been affected by the outages. One hospital has declared a
“critical” incident after a third-party IT system it used was impacted. Also in
the country, train operators have said there are delays across the network, with
multiple companies being impacted.

Indicating the far-reaching nature of the disruption, the organizers of the
Paris Olympics, which is due to start next week, said that its systems have been
impacted in a “limited way.” According to a statement from the organizers, the
affected systems are linked to the delivery of uniforms and its ticketing system
hasn’t been impacted.

Among other services, CrowdStrike provides endpoint detection and response (EDR)
to companies around the world. This EDR technology runs on thousands of
“endpoints”—such as computers, ATMs, and internet-of-things devices—and scans
them to identify real-time threats, such as malicious activity from
cybercriminals. The company has more than 24,000 customers around the world.

Cybersecurity researcher Kevin Beaumont posted on X that he has seen a copy of
the CrowdStrike update that was issued and says the file isn’t properly
formatted and “causes Windows to crash every time.” Beaumont says, in further
posts, that it appears there isn’t an automated way to fix the issues, at least
currently. This may mean that impacted machines need to be manually rebooted
before they can come back online, a process that could take hours or days
depending on the impacted entity.

Brody Nisbet, the director of overwatch at CrowdStrike, also posted on X
indicating that the workaround fix the company had issued involves booting up
Windows machines into safe mode, finding a file called “C-00000291*.sys,”
deleting it, and then rebooting the machine normally. “There is a fix of sorts
so some devices in between BSODs should pick up the new channel file and remain
stable,” Nisbet posted.

Update 7/19/24 1:35pm ET: This story has been updated with further comment from
Microsoft, and additional details about the outage's impacts.






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Matt Burgess is a senior writer at WIRED focused on information security,
privacy, and data regulation in Europe. He graduated from the University of
Sheffield with a degree in journalism and now lives in London. Send tips to
Matt_Burgess@wired.com.
Senior writer
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TopicssecurityMicrosoftWindowscybersecurityvulnerabilitiesIT


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