Kuwait Times

Microsoft says about 8.5m of its devices affected by outage

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WASHINGTON: A global tech outage that was related to a software update by cybersecur­ity firm CrowdStrik­e affected nearly 8.5 million Microsoft devices, Microsoft said in a blog post on Saturday.

“We currently estimate that CrowdStrik­e’s update affected 8.5 million Windows devices, or less than one percent of all Windows machines,” it said in the blog. A software update by global cybersecur­ity firm CrowdStrik­e, one of the largest operators in the industry, triggered system problems that grounded flights, forced broadcaste­rs off air and left customers without access to services such as healthcare or banking. “While the percentage was small, the broad economic and societal impacts reflect the use of CrowdStrik­e by enterprise­s that run many critical services,” Microsoft said in its blog post. CrowdStrik­e has helped develop a solution that will help Microsoft’s Azure infrastruc­ture accelerate a fix, Microsoft said, adding that it was working with Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud Platform, sharing informatio­n about the effects Microsoft was seeing across the industry.

The air travel industry was recovering on Saturday from the outage that caused thousands of flights to be cancelled, leaving passengers stranded or grappling with hours of delays as airports and airlines were caught up in the IT outage. Delta Air Lines, one of the hardest-hit airlines, said that as of 10 am EDT (1400 GMT) on Saturday, more than 600 flights had been canceled, adding that additional cancellati­ons were expected. “Friday’s global tech outage is an example of an unforeseen event that market participan­ts always fear, but don’t frequently think about,” said Glen Smith, chief investment officer at GDS Wealth Management.

By the start of US business, normality was returning. The New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq said markets were operationa­l and working normally. Major US banks including Bank of America and Goldman Sachs said they had not seen any major impact on their systems or operations. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? NEW YORK: People stand inside the Microsoft store on Fifth Avenue in New York City.
— AFP NEW YORK: People stand inside the Microsoft store on Fifth Avenue in New York City.

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