Services around the world seem to be affected. Reports of chaos at airports and hospitals emerge.

  • @Burstar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1404 months ago

    Early reports suggest that cyber security firm CrowdStrike may be to blame by pushing out a security update for its product that features a bug.

    I hate Windows as much as the next Lemmy user but it takes 8 paragraphs before this gets clarified.

    • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      424 months ago

      Article must be old too

      Crowdstrike already rolled out an update, it’s just everything that’s already BSOD is going to take a while to be manually rolled back

      • enkers
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        464 months ago

        An additional problem is bitlocked devices that can’t get access to their own disc to fix the problem. And in some cases, the key servers are even down as well. It’s a huge mess.

        Definitely not what you want to hear as an IT worker on a Friday.

      • @Dagnet@lemmy.world
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        14 months ago

        The article rn is all over the place alternating between saying the fix will take a long time to come and saying the fix already has been deployed, lol

        • @Confused_Emus@lemmy.world
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          14 months ago

          Not all that confusing. The fix is deployed so it won’t affect any more machines. The ones already affected will take a while to restore.

    • zelifcam
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      3 months ago

      CrowdStrike

      Ah yes. Very familiar with their software. From time to a time an update or version would wreak havoc on your Kubernetes cluster or at the very least degrade performance.

      IT threw it on our laptops and on occasion I’d have to kill the process.