Security

Global tech outage live updates: Flights grounded and offices hit as internet users face disruptions – The Associated Press


A widespread technology outage grounded flights, knocked banks offline and media outlets off air on Friday in a massive disruption that affected companies and services around the world and highlighted dependence on software from a handful of providers.

Cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike said that the issue believed to be behind the outage was not a security incident or cyberattack.

What to know about the global tech outage:

  • Cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike said the problem occurred when it deployed a faulty update to computers running Microsoft Windows.
  • The company said a fix was on the way — but hours after the problem was first detected, the disarray escalated.

Hospitals and clinics in Houston, Texas affected

In Texas, Harris Health System, which runs public hospitals and clinics in the Houston area, said it had to suspend hospital visits “until further notice” on Friday due to the outage.

Elective hospital procedures on Friday were being canceled and rescheduled. Clinic appointments were initially impacted, but they returned to normal later Friday.

“Some services may not be available due to the current CrowdStrike incident. We appreciate your patience and understanding as we work through this disruption,” the health system said.

Georgia’s driver services department reports outages

In the state of Georgia, the Department of Driver Services said its computer systems were down at more than 60 offices statewide. The department was still giving road tests, but wasn’t issuing licenses to people who passed.

The Metropolitan Atlanta Regional Transit Authority said problems had caused service reductions on its rail system earlier in the morning, but that full rail service had been restored.

However, the system’s website, service information systems and online ticket sales remained disrupted.


New York mayor says no impact on critical infrastructure

In New York City, Mayor Eric Adams stressed there was no impact to critical infrastructure or emergency operations in the United States’ largest city, including the 911 system.

“There are no calls being held or missed. There is no backlog,” Adams said.

Transit officials also said train and bus service was unaffected, even as travel woes mounted at the city’s busy airports.


Maryland courts, offices and facilities will be closed to the public

By BRIAN WITTE, SARAH BRUMFIELD


Maryland’s Judiciary has announced that all Maryland courts, offices and facilities will be closed to the public on Friday because of the Microsoft outage, but will remain open for emergency matters.

“Due to the worldwide Microsoft outage, all Maryland courts, offices, and facilities will be closed to the public today but will remain open for emergency matters,” the judiciary said in a news release. “All clerks’ offices are closed.”

The Maryland Department of Emergency Management announced Friday that it was increasing the state activation level from “normal” to “partial,” meaning there’s an event that requires significant monitoring or resources. The agency is also activating its emergency operations center.

Brazilian bank says digital services are unstable

By E. EDUARDO CASTILLO


Bradesco, one of the main banks in Brazil, notified its users via its app that digital services were unstable because of a global cyber outage, but its ATMs were working normally. Bradesco has more than 100 million clients.

Azul Airlines, a Brazilian low-cost airline, said that its check-in systems were affected, causing occasional flight delays. The company recommended that customers arrive at the airport earlier.

The National Civil Aviation Agency of Brazil said that it’s monitoring the impacts on airports, but so far there haven’t been major delays.


Mass General Brigham canceling all nonurgent care visits

The Boston-based health system Mass General Brigham said on its website that it was canceling all nonurgent care visits because of the outage, but its emergency rooms remain open.

The company said on its website that it can’t gain access to its clinical systems, including patient health records and scheduling.

It asked patients not to call to reschedule and said a care team member would reach out to them instead.

About 1,500 US flights canceled by late morning, FlightAware says

By late morning on the East Coast, about 1,500 U.S. flights had been canceled and nearly 4,000 delayed — numbers that were sure to grow throughout the day — according to FlightAware.

Delta canceled nearly 500 flights, American canceled 300 and United more than 200, and those numbers don’t include flights on their regional affiliates.


CVS says drugstores and pharmacies operating normally

A spokesman for health care company CVS Health Corp. said Friday morning that its drugstores and pharmacies were operating normally.


CrowdStrike CEO says sorry for impact of outage

“We’re deeply sorry for the impact that we’ve caused to customers, to travelers, to anyone affected by this, including our companies,” CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said on NBC’s “Today Show” Friday. “We know what the issue is” and are working to remediate it.

He said the system was sent an update and the update had a bug in it causing a problem to Microsoft’s Windows operating system.

“It was only the Microsoft operating system” that was affected, though it didn’t happen on every Microsoft Windows system, he said.


Capital Economics says outage likely to have little impact on world economy

The global computer outage likely will have little impact on the world economy, according to forecasting firm Capital Economics, particularly because it hasn’t disrupted financial markets.

“While things are still very uncertain, we do not anticipate a major macroeconomic or financial market impact at this stage,” Jennifer McKeown, chief global economist at Capital Economics, said in a written comment. “It is encouraging from an economic standpoint that there has been little financial disturbance so far.”

The firm estimated in late 2022 that even a cyberattack that lasted several days would only shave global economic growth by about 0.2%.

“Given that this is not a cyberattack and has not affected all software by any stretch, the implications should be significantly smaller,” McKeown said.

Cybersecurity analyst calls outage historic mistake by CrowdStrike

Richard Stiennon, a cybersecurity industry analyst, said that this was a historic mistake by CrowdStrike.

“This is easily the worst faux pas, technical faux pas or glitch of any security software provider ever,” said Stiennon, who has tracked the cybersecurity industry for 24 years.

He said while the problem is an easy technical fix, it’s impact could be long lasting.

“It’s really, really difficult to touch millions of machines. And people are on vacation right now, so, you know, the CEO will be coming back from his trip to the Bahamas in a couple of weeks and he won’t be able to use his computers.”

A county in Michigan closes nonessential operations for the day

In Michigan, Genesee County, which includes Flint, closed nonessential county government operations for the day.


Panama airline advises passengers to arrive to airport 3 hours ahead of time

In Panama, Copa Airlines was recommending that travelers arrive to the capital’s Tocumen International Airport at least three hours before their scheduled flights because some procedures were being carried out manually, delaying check-in.

The airline, however, said that it didn’t expect cancellations.


South African airports unaffected by global outage

The company that runs South Africa’s airports, which include some of the busiest on the African continent, says they have been unaffected by the global network outage.

Airports Company South Africa says it doesn’t use CrowdStrike services and operations are running as normal.


Some US TV stations couldn’t air local news

The global outage has prevented several TV stations in the U.S. from airing local news early Friday.

KSHB-TV in Kansas City, Missouri, aired national news network Scripps News instead of local news until about 5:35 a.m., the stations said on its website. IT teams and engineers worked through the night to resolve the glitch, the station said.

Other local stations owned by Scripps and other companies reported similar problems.

Scripps spokesman Michael Perry said in an email that as of 8 a.m. EDT, 90% of stations were able to air local news.

Universal Studios Japan says ticket sales are affected

Universal Studios Japan in Osaka, western Japan, has said that the global system outage will continue to affect ticket sales at the attraction over the weekend.

The park said its ticket booth sales will not be available Saturday and Sunday, and asked visitors to purchase their tickets on its official website or via a designated ticket sales site.

Park attractions are not affected.


General Motors reports minor production disruptions

General Motors has reported that it had some minor production interruptions at some factories because supply companies had trouble delivering parts due to the outage.

Many factories rely on “just-in-time” deliveries. Spokesman Kevin Kelly said no production shifts were changed.

“It wasn’t anything significant,” he said.


Microsoft confirms Crowdstrike update was responsible for issues

Microsoft spokesperson Frank X. Shaw has confirmed that “a Crowdstrike update was responsible for bringing down a number of Windows systems globally.”

“We are actively supporting customers to assist in their recovery,” he said in an emailed statement Friday.


President Biden’s team is in touch with Crowdstrike

President Joe Biden has been briefed on the CrowdStrike outage and his team has been in touch with CrowdStrike and impacted entities, according to the White House.

Biden is getting continued updates throughout the day and the administration is “standing by to provide assistance as needed,” the White House said.

Japan’s Jetstar cancels mostly domestic flights

At the Narita International Airport near Tokyo, passengers of low-cost carrier Jetstar Japan formed long lines waiting at the airline’s departure counter, where boarding had to be processed manually due to a system failure.

Jetstar Japan said it has canceled 28 flights, most of them domestic, due to a software problem that stalled the airline’s boarding procedures at airports across the country including Narita.

The airline apologized for the inconveniences and said it was doing utmost to restore the system as soon as possible.


Border crossings and healthcare affected in Canada

In Canada, the tech outage grounded some flights, disrupted hospitals and backed up border crossings on Friday.

Porter Airlines said it is cancelling its flights until 12 p.m. ET due to the outage. Air Canada, Canada’s largest airline, said there is no major impact to its operations.

University Health Network, one of Canada’s largest hospital networks, said some of its systems had been impacted and some patients may experience delays.

Windsor Police reported long delays at both the Canada-United States border crossings at the Ambassador Bridge and the Detroit-Windsor tunnel.

“No use getting upset,” passenger says


What is Crowdstrike?

Crowdstrike, the cybersecurity company at the heart of the global outage, was founded in 2012 by George Kurtz, Dmitri Alerovitch and Gregg Marston, according to its website. It says it is the most advanced cloud-based security technology provider.

Kurtz, its CEO, said in a note on the site that “Our team of visionaries are the rebels who believe the current state of security is fundamentally broken and want to do something about it.”

CrowdStrike listed on the Nasdaq exchange five years ago. It reported last month that its revenue rose 33% in the last quarter from the previous quarter and that logged a net profit of $42.8 million, up from $491,000 in the first quarter of this year.

The company has a partnership with Amazon Web Services and its Falcon for Defender is designed to supplement Microsoft Defender to prevent attacks.

The firm said Friday’s global disruptions occurred when it deployed a faulty update to computers running Microsoft Windows. The issue was not a security incident or cyberattack, and a fix was on the way, it said.

Some U.S. states report 911 disruptions

UK expert comments on global tech outage disrupting flights, banks, and companies

Cyber expert James Bore said on Friday that the global technology outage “is going to take some time to fix” as flights, banks, media outlets and companies across the world continue to face disruption.


More than 100 flights cancelled at New York airports

More than 300 flights were delayed and more than 100 flights were cancelled so far on Friday at the three major airports in the New York city area — JFK, LaGuardia and Newark Liberty in New Jersey, according to airline tracker Flight Aware.

The city’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority said regional train and bus service hasn’t been affected but advised travelers not to head to the airport unless their flight status is confirmed.

Banks in South Africa saw service disruptions for several hours

In South Africa, at least two major banks said they experienced service disruptions as customers complained they weren’t able to make payments using their bank cards at grocery stores and gas stations or use ATMs.

Both banks said they were able to restore services hours later.

Southern African regional airline Airlink also reported that its IT network and telephone lines were down because of what it called a global network outage, but said flights were not affected.


Here are some airlines and airports reporting disruptions

By The Associated Press


London Stock Exchange says some services disrupted, but trading not affected

The London Stock Exchange says it is experiencing disruptions from the technology outage that has created chaos around the globe.

The LSE says its regulatory news service was not working Friday morning but the outage had not affected trading.

“We are currently experiencing a third party technical issue which is impacting some of our services,” a London Stock Exchange Group spokesperson said in a statement.

The exchange says it’s trying to resolve the problem as soon as possible.

Nasdaq said Friday: “Our European markets and U.S. pre-market are operating normally. We expect our U.S. markets to open normally.”


Thai, Singapore airports report disruptions

By JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI, EILEEN NG


The automated border control system at Bangkok’s two airports have been affected by the tech outage, according to
Kerati Kijmanawat, president of Thailand’s airport authorities.

The ground operation of several airlines at six major Thai airports has also been disrupted, he added. He encouraged passengers to come to the airports at least 4 hours before their departure time.

Airports in Singapore and Malaysia were also reporting similar issues, with long queues and passengers worried about missing their flights due to the long check-in process.

Singapore Post also reported technical disruptions to its services, as did Malaysia’s railway company KTM.

Flights delayed at Berlin airport as widespread technology outage causes disruption around world

Flights at Germany’s Berlin Airport were delayed on Friday morning as a widespread fault with some Microsoft technology caused chaos around the globe.


Hundreds wait for manual check-in at Hong Kong airport

Digital disruptions can cause real harm: cyber security expert

A cyber security expert said internet outages will cause real harm as hospitals and other essential services are disrupted.

“There are going to be deaths because of this. It’s inevitable,’’ said James Bore, the managing director of cyber security consulting company Bores.

“We’ve got so many systems tied up with this. We’ve got emergency services. There are going to be excess deaths. People will die who wouldn’t have otherwise. And we’re not talking millions, but it is going to hurt people. And there are really serious consequences. That’s without getting into anything financial, which is of less importance. This is going to cause harm.”


Olympics uniforms, some delegations delayed by travel outages


CrowdStrike says it’s working to fix issues caused by Windows update

CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said the company was working to fix problems created for Windows users of its tools by a recent update in a post on the social media platform X.

CrowdStrike is actively working with customers impacted by a defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts. Mac and Linux hosts are not impacted. This is not a security incident or cyberattack. The issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed. We refer customers to the support portal for the latest updates and will continue to provide complete and continuous updates on our website. We further recommend organizations ensure they’re communicating with CrowdStrike representatives through official channels. Our team is fully mobilized to ensure the security and stability of CrowdStrike customers.

CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz

Outage affects doctor’s offices across the UK

Britain’s National Health Service says a global internet outage is causing problems at most doctors’ offices across England.

NHS England said in a statement said the glitch was hitting the appointment and patient record system used across the public health system. The state-funded NHS treats the vast majority of people in the U.K.

The NHS said the issue was affecting the majority of family doctors’ practices, but was not the 999 number used to call for ambulances in emergencies.

Polish shipping hub grinds to a halt

By MONIKA SCISLOWSKA


Baltic Hub, a major container hub in the Baltic port of Gdansk, Poland, says it is battling problems resulting from the global system outage.

The hub’s entry gates were temporarily closed on Friday morning and they suspended business.


Paris airport says its computers are working, but Olympics travelers could still face delays


UK’s Sky News back on the air

The U.K. television station Sky News began broadcasting again after the outage knocked it off the air during the morning.

The news anchor referred to printed notes after getting back on the air.

Sky News was able to deliver news on its app and website during the broadcast outage.


Outages could be related to a CrowdStrike security tool

By ASSOCIATED PRESS


One possible cause of the internet issues plaguing airlines, companies and governments around the world is a tool developed by the online security firm CrowdStrike.

Israel’s Cyber Directorate was among the groups attributing the issues to CrowdStrike.

A recording playing on CrowdStrike’s customer service line said, “CrowdStrike is aware of the reports of crashes on Microsoft ports related to the Falcon sensor,” it said, referring to one of its products used to block online attacks. It said callers should monitor its customer support portal.

Widespread tech outage disrupts flights and companies worldwide

By CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-McLAY






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