The MBTA was one of many victims of the global Crowdstrike IT outage Friday morning. While trains and buses kept running, the issue made a mess of the boards T uses to communicate with its riders.
“You can’t miss the blue screen of death,” sai…
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The MBTA was one of many victims of the global Crowdstrike IT outage Friday morning. While trains and buses kept running, the issue made a mess of the boards T uses to communicate with its riders.
“You can’t miss the blue screen of death,” sai…
by
Computer monitors around the world displayed a blue screen with a sad face Friday morning.
The company at the center of the outage says it wasn’t a security incident or a cyberattack, but many are questioning how something like this could happen?
“This is a really big mess, to be honest,” said Steve Zuromski, the vice president of Information Technology at Bridgewater State University.
Cybersecurity company CrowdStrike said Friday morning’s failure was the result of a routine update gone wrong.
Their software is installed on Microsoft Windows clients around the world.
“The software is designed to prevent cyberattacks and malicious activities from happening on those devices,” said Zuromski.
But the update, he said, caused Microsoft cloud computing systems to crash bringing up that dreaded blue screen.
“It’s a fairly routine update,” said Zuromski. “We do these things all of the time but unfortunately this one caused a major, major incident that’s affecting millions of people.”
He added that what made this more complicated is that the repairs can only be done with a manual update.
“What technicians are having to do, at least as of now, is manually go to each work station, boot it into what’s called safe mode, which is basically a diagnostic mode, delete the file that’s causing it to crash and then reboot,” said Zuromski.
Friday morning on NBC’s Today Show, CrowdStrike’s CEO apologized for the outage.
“We’re deeply sorry for the impact that we’ve caused to customers, to travelers, to anyone affected by this, including our company,” said George Kurtz, CEO of CrowdStrike.
Zuromski said CrowdStrike is a very reputable company.
“They have a suite of cyber security products,” he said. “Unfortunately this one got the best of them.”
Zuromski said a lot can be learned from this massive outage.
“Customers need to be prepared in the event that there is a global update or a major update like this,” he said. “How they’re going to recover from it, so make sure you dust off those incident response plans and be ready when something happens.”
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A pediatric doctor in Boston has been arrested on allegations that he distributed child sexual abuse material.
Federal prosecutors said Friday that 35-year-old Christopher Sheerer, who began a fellowship in cardiac anesthesiology this month at…
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Lawmakers sent Gov. Maura Healey an overdue state budget Friday afternoon that pitches a bevy of statewide policy changes baked into a $58 billion spending plan for fiscal year 2025.
The compromise budget was filed Thursday night, the product …
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Netflix has announced a three-part documentary series focused on the Karen Read murder trial and the death of Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe.
Read faced charges including second-degree murder in the death of O’Keefe, her boyfriend, with prosecutors alleging that she struck him with her SUV outside a home in Canton, Massachusetts, in January 2022. But her defense argued that she was the victim of a law enforcement conspiracy to protect the real killers.
After a trial that spanned months and drew intense media attention, jurors failed to return a verdict, and the case was declared a mistrial.
The Netflix series, which does not have a title yet, is currently in production with Sandpaper Films, co-directed by Danielle Johnson and Rob Miller.
“The team feels immensely privileged to be bringing this important series to a Netflix global audience,” Johnson and Miller told Netflix. “It is a case that has garnered a huge amount of public attention and has far-reaching implications. We are also mindful that this is a hugely sensitive case and we are determined to treat all those involved with the respect and consideration they deserve.”
The mistrial is far from the end of the case, and it remains unclear if there will ever be justice for O’Keefe. Prosecutors have said they intend to retry Read, while the defense is pushing for dismissal on two charges – second-degree murder and leaving the scene of a crash resulting in death. The jury list remains impounded as questions swirl about the safety of jurors. And the prosecution will have to manage the fallout as one of their key witnesses – former State Police lead investigator Michael Proctor – was suspended without pay for his conduct.
Netflix has not provided a release date for the documentary series.
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The former senior manager of special operations for eBay Inc.’s. global security team was sentenced Thursday in federal court in Boston for his role in a cyberstalking campaign that included sending a preserved fetal pig, a bloody pig Halloween m…
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