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A widespread technology outage grounded flights, knocked banks offline and media outlets off air on Friday in a massive disruption that affected companies and services around the world and highlighted dependence on software from a handful of providers. “Due to the worldwide Microsoft outage, all Maryland courts, offices, and facilities will be closed to the public today but will remain open for emergency matters,” the judiciary said in a news release. “While things are still very uncertain, we do not anticipate a major macroeconomic or financial market impact at this stage,” Jennifer McKeown, chief global economist at Capital Economics, said in a written comment. At the Narita International Airport near Tokyo, passengers of low-cost carrier Jetstar Japan formed long lines waiting at the airline’s departure counter, where boarding had to be processed manually due to a system failure. At Hong Kong’s airport, hundreds of travellers were queuing for manual check-in around the counters of budget airline HK Express, which said that its global e-commerce system was affected by Microsoft’s service outage. CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said the company was working to fix problems created for Windows users of its tools by a recent update in a post on the social media platform X. — Saved 94% of original text.
technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 months ago
Microsoft is an insecure monopolistic grift. Hopefully it takes down capitalism with it.
CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml 5 months ago
I don’t disagree, but today the blame lies with CrowdStrike, not Windows. As much as I hate defending Windows.
Cube6392@beehaw.org 5 months ago
I’ve seen a weird number of people blaming Microsoft for this today, and an American even weirder number of people making fun of people saying this isn’t on Microsoft