Today, a malicious software update from cybersecurity provider Crowdstrike
rendered numerous Microsoft Windows systems inoperable worldwide, interfering
with internet operations for hospitals, businesses, financial institutions, and
airlines. Although experts warn that recovery from this outage may take some
time, as Crowdstrike's solution must be manually administered on a per-machine
basis, the company has stated that a remedy has been released.
A picture captured today at San Jose
International Airport displays the ubiquitous Microsoft "Blue Screen of
Death." Twitter.com/adamdubya1990 is credited.
The program started displaying the infamous "Blue Screen of Death" on
Windows computers using it earlier today due to an incorrect update that
Crowdstrike sent out, making those systems momentarily inoperable. Similar to
other security software, Crowdstrike depends on extensive integration with the
Windows operating system to repel cyberattacks; yet, in such a setting, even a
little programming mistake might have disastrous consequences.
George Kurtz, the CEO of Crowdstrike, stated in
a post on Twitter/X that Mac and Linux users are unaffected and that an update
has been sent to fix the code error.
Kurtz echoed a written statement from Crowdstrike on Twitter, saying,
"This is not a security incident or cyberattack." "A fix has
been deployed once the issue has been located and isolated."
The solution, according to a tweet from Crowdstrike's threat hunting operations
director, is to restart the computer after removing the file
"C-00000291*.sys" and booting Windows into Safe Mode or the Windows
Recovery Environment (Windows RE).
According to The New York Times, a recent spate of failures affecting
Microsoft's Azure cloud services may have made the software problem worse.
However, it's still unclear whether these Azure issues are connected to the
problematic Crowdstrike version. Revision at 4:03 p.m. ET: According to Microsoft,
the problematic Crowdstrike upgrade had nothing to do with today's Azure
issues.
This picture was posted by a reader from Denver International Airport
earlier today. Twitter.com/jterryy07 is credited.
According to Matt Burgess of Wired, several
medical practitioners worldwide have reported problems with Windows-linked
systems, disseminating information on social media or their own websites.
There have been several 911 failures in several states, according to the US
Emergency Alert System, which sends storm alerts, Burgess said.
"University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein in Germany said that it was
postponing a few non-urgent surgical procedures at two sites. More than a dozen
hospitals and pharmacies in Israel have reportedly been affected, and
ambulances have reportedly been diverted to unaffected medical facilities.
The appointment and patient record systems in the UK have been affected by the
disruptions, according to NHS England.
According to Wired, "one hospital has declared a 'critical' incident
after it was impacted by a third-party IT system." "Train operators
in the nation have reported that there are delays throughout the network,
affecting numerous companies."
Social media was awash with pictures of passengers at airports surrounded by
computer displays showing the Microsoft blue screen error as a result of
today's outage, prompting quick and harsh reactions. The CEO of Crowdstrike was
chastised by several Twitter and X users for not apologizing for the extremely
disruptive event, and others pointed out that the business would face legal
action if it did.
In the meantime, the global Windows outage swiftly emerged as the most
discussed topic on Twitter/X, where a collection of satirical postings from
cybersecurity experts posing as first-week employees at Crowdstrike was
compiled by artificial intelligence bots. Amazingly, Twitter/X's AI condensed
these caustic tweets into a positive, upbeat narrative about Crowdstrike, which
was trending as the #1 topic on Twitter this morning.
The AI description stated, "Several people have recently begun working at
the cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike and have expressed their excitement and
pride in their new roles." "They are hoping for successful results in
their work and have shared their experiences of pushing code to production on
their first day."
wow suprised
ReplyDelete