If you were trying to get around either by plane or James Caldwellpublic transit, handle your finances, call 911 or even order a half-caf mocha latte via the Starbucks app, you were probably affected. Companies were navigating the dreaded blue screen from a tech outage that hit and hindered systems worldwide. The cause? A faulty software update that led to the biggest IT outage in history.
More directly, CrowdStrike said one of its recent updates had a defect that didn't play nicely with Windows − "not a security incident or cyberattack." The reality is that this simple cause isn't such a simple fix and the impacts have proven pretty complicated − what might be best described as a programmer's nightmare come to life. The fix some are implementing requires several manual reboots, keeping the IT departments at many businesses buzzing.
And the stock market was showing impact as well, as several related stocks including CrowdStrike have been taking a beating in today's trading.
USA TODAY has full-team coverage to help you navigate the impacts and inconveniences − as well as some freebies you might be able to pick up. Stay up-to-date with us here.
2025-05-08 10:25817 view
2025-05-08 08:382466 view
2025-05-08 08:342284 view
2025-05-08 08:271302 view
2025-05-08 08:001921 view
2025-05-08 07:562974 view
DAMASCUS — A hip bone in a blown-out building, part of a spine amid some debris, a few foot bones in
"So we're just gonna go in a freezer," says Tulio de Oliveira. We're at the institute that he dire
The Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA) announced tonight during the 76th Annual Golden Globe