• 5 months ago
With so many systems crippled, and companies impacted, the big question is, exactly what went wrong?

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Transcript
00:00Yesterday's unprecedented outage boils down to knock-on effects.
00:06They don't call it the web for nothing.
00:08Two systems broke on the same day.
00:10The first was with Microsoft and its cloud service Azure, which has a 25 per cent global
00:16market share.
00:17The second was with CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity provider to almost 18 per cent of the market.
00:23Both crucial, both broken, and both tangled up with the world's tech infrastructure.
00:29Around 7am, Microsoft reported problems with its cloud.
00:34So when all hell broke loose eight hours later, that's where the finger was pointing.
00:38But it looks like the trigger for the real chaos came from CrowdStrike.
00:42A bug in its software update, which was rolled out globally, crashed Windows systems and
00:47everything they touched, dramatically compounding the smaller problems that had been there all
00:52day.
00:53CrowdStrike rolled out a fix yesterday afternoon.
00:57In which case, why are so many systems still down?
01:01The short answer is those knock-on effects.
01:04When a computer crashes, it can cause problems for the computers that rely on it, and the
01:08others that rely on them.
01:10Fixing the first problem helps, but the new problems need their own fix.
01:14A manual reboot, or repair from an IT professional who may or may not have gone home for the
01:20weekend.

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