Business Global IT outage live updates: Australian banks, airlines, media outlets taken offline - Bloody Bitch Bastard

There's a global outage of MicroSoft Windows machines currently, amusingly. This website is laid out in a very frustrating way, so I've included the main excerpts here:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-07...-microsoft-banks-airlines-australia/104119960 (archive)

There are reports of IT outages affecting major institutions in Australia and internationally.
The ABC is experiencing a major network outage, along with several other media outlets.
Crowd-sourced website Downdetector is listing outages for Foxtel, National Australia Bank and Bendigo Bank.

Like a number of other organisations, global issues affecting CrowdStrike and Microsoft are disrupting some of our systems.
The issue is causing some holdups for some of our customers and we thank them for their patience.
There is no impact to our fixed or mobile network which continue to operate.
Calls to our Triple Zero contact centres are not affected, but we understand some state emergency services are also impacted and we are working with them to implement backup processes.

CrowdStrike ran a recorded phone message on Friday saying it was aware of reports of crashes on Microsoft's Windows operating system relating to its Falcon sensor.
"Thanks for contacting CrowdStrike support. CrowdStrike is aware of reports of crashes on Windows … related to the Falcon sensor," a prerecorded message played when a Reuters reporter called the company's technical support.

University of Melbourne lecturer in cyber security Shaanan Cohney says there appear to be two separate things happening at once to cause the mass outages we are seeing.
The first issue, he says, appears to have been caused by a piece of software developed by a company called CrowdStrike.
"It's a computer security vendor that provides a monitoring service to large enterprises so they can see on computers within their control if there's any indications of suspicious activity or things that would require a security alert or to lock down the computer," Dr Cohney says.
"Because this software needs to see everything that is going on, it's very tightly integrated into the computer's software, so when you install it, it asks for a lot of permissions so that it can ask for everything going on on the computer.
"However, because it's in such a privileged position, if something goes wrong with it, if there's a programming mistake it has the capability to bring down the entire computer.
"If someone makes the wrong type of mistake it can bring the whole system down.
"As far as we can tell what it looks like happened with this piece of software is the company issued a significant update and something in the update went wrong.
"Engineers at the company and those outside are scrambling to try to pinpoint the source so they can try to pinpoint the problem so that's why companies are telling their employees to shut down their computer in order to prevent them from updating so those employees can maintain some minimal capabilities and have access to documents that are offline."
Reporting by Andi Yu

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Yet another thread where people bleat replies without reading the article. These security agents rarely work right on Mac and the nebula of Linux OSes by default so obviously Crowdstrike Falcon is going to break Windows. Journoscum sensationalize it as "oohh Windows broke!!!" and since it's Microshit being spat on the average KFer eats it right up.

Major US carriers ground flights citing communication issues
Reuters (archive.ph)
By Reuters Staff
2024-07-19 07:28:59GMT
July 19 (Reuters) - Major U.S. carriers including American Airlines, Delta Airlines, and United Airlines issued ground stops on Friday morning citing communication issues, less than an hour after Microsoft resolved its cloud services outage that impacted several low-cost carriers.

It was not immediately clear whether the call to keep flights from taking off were related to the earlier Microsoft cloud outage. Apart from American and Delta, UAL and Allegiant Air too grounded flights.

The FAA did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comment.

Low-cost carriers Frontier Airlines, a unit of Frontier Group Holdings
Allegiant and SunCountry had earlier reported outages that affected operations. Frontier said late Thursday that it was in the process of resuming normal operations, and that the ground stop had been lifted.

Frontier said earlier that a "major Microsoft technical outage" hit its operations temporarily, while SunCountry said a third-party vendor affected its booking and check-in facilities, without naming the company.

U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg said the department was monitoring the flight cancellation and delay issues at Frontier, adding that the agency will hold the company and all other airlines "to their responsibilities to meet the needs of passengers".

"The Allegiant website is currently unavailable due to the Microsoft Azure issue," Nevada-based Allegiant said in a statement to CNN. Allegiant did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for a comment.

Frontier cancelled 147 flights on Thursday and delayed 212 others, according to data tracker FlightAware. 45% of Allegiant aircrafts were delayed, while Sun Country delayed 23% flights, the data showed. The companies did not give details on the number of flights impacted.

Microsoft said its outage started at about 6 pm ET on Thursday, with a subset of its customers experiencing issues with multiple Azure services in the Central U.S. region.

Azure is a cloud computing platform that provides services for building, deploying, and managing applications and services.

Separately, Microsoft said it was investigating an issue impacting various Microsoft 365 apps and services.

Reporting by Maria Ponnezhath and Shivani Tanna; Additional reporting by Chandni Shah in Bengaluru; writing by Abinaya Vijayaraghavan and Shubham Kalia; Editing by Varun H K, Mrigank Dhaniwala and Nivedita Bhattacharjee
Bloomberg has live updates here:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/live-blog/2024-07-19/microsoft-cloud-technical-outage-updates
Ah yes the Linux versions of Microsoft Azure. Could totally happen to any OS.
 
I'm confused, is this affecting Windows computers installed with a specific version of windows or a common networking/IT software? Or is this also affecting personal machines? I might switch to linux sooner rather than later at this rate...
 
I couldn't login and authenticate myself earlier which led to being unable to read mail, access the company portal or even connect to the Intranet to be able to work.
Glad to see that its a global issue that it has reach the levels of "all our planes are fucking grounded" infrastructure fuckery.

Total Microsoft Death
 
I've never had to pause updates in so long either, but so glad to KF for the warning or I'd have no idea. Glad this was on the most active politics thread for sure.
 
I'm confused, is this affecting Windows computers installed with a specific version of windows or a common networking/IT software? Or is this also affecting personal machines? I might switch to linux sooner rather than later at this rate...
It's an enterprise antivirus, Crowdstrike Falcon. The agent it installs on monitored systems pushed an update that kills Windows pcs. The fix basically needs an IT person to physically touch your computer. Many global systems are down and unrecoverable.

eta I guess it should be said, if you aren't using this antivirus, you're fine. The problem is, Microsoft uses that antivirus, so does a lot of large global companies and they are all down right now. lol.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
This seems like a warning shot to me. Someone is sending a message that they can take out infrastructure at will.
It’s linked to the election
maybe it was just a suicidal troon that did one last software change before leaving work and hanging themselves?

Hacker News throwaway claims to know what's happened. (Archive)

tl;dr pissed over everyone's rules pushing a performance fix to production.

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That would explain the Azure outage. if a good portion of virtual machines are in a reboot loop that would be an unusually high load all at once that the Azure cloud wasn't designed to handle.
 
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