A major disruption to Windows PCs in the U.S., U.K., Australia, South Africa and other countries was caused by an error in a CrowdStrike update, the cloud security company announced on Friday. Emergency services, airports and law enforcement reported downtime, which is ongoing.
“This is not a security incident or cyberattack,” CrowdStrike said in a statement.
Affected organizations saw the infamous Blue Screen of Death, the Windows system crash alert. According to The Verge, the problem originated with an update to a kernel level driver used to connect CrowdStrike to Windows PCs and servers.
American Airlines, United and Delta flights were delayed on Friday morning due to the issue impacting the airlines’ IT systems. U.K. media outlet Sky News reported on its own television outage early Friday morning. The New Hampshire emergency services department reported it is back online after disruption to 911 services early Friday.
“The issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed,” CrowdStrike said on Friday. However, outages on some machines that were initially affected are still being reported.
Microsoft 365 reported a service degradation warning on Friday morning, but this appears to be a separate incident.
CrowdStrike made 14.74% of the total software revenue for security software segments and regions in 2023, according to data Gartner sent to TechRepublic by email. Microsoft made 40.16%.
SEE: Downtime costs the world’s largest companies $400 billion a year, according to Splunk.
CrowdStrike recommends that its customers keep in touch with CrowdStrike representatives. Organizations, even those not directly affected, should check in with their SaaS partners to see whether they might be experiencing issues.
Because this issue affected so many different organizations, this could be a good time to assess your organization’s reliance on one provider or service, as well as to be sure your organization has a strong recovery process in place.
This article will be updated as more information becomes available.