CrowdStrike to improve testing after âbugâ caused outage
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CrowdStrike has promised to improve how it tests software after its faulty content update for Windows systems caused a mass global IT outage on Friday.
The cybersecurity companyâs mistake resulted in problems for banks, hospitals and airlines as millions of PCs displayed âblue screens of deathâ.
In a detailed review of the incident published on Wednesday, CrowdStrike said the problem occurred due to a âbugâ in the system which was meant to check software updates were working properly.
The glitch meant its system did not identify âproblematic content dataâ in a file.
The company said it could prevent the incident from happening again with better software testing and checks, including more scrutiny from developers.
The faulty update crashed 8.5 million Microsoft Windows computers around the world and George Kurtz, Crowdstrikeâs boss, has apologised for the impact of the outage.
But cybersecurity experts told BBC News that the review revealed âmajor mistakesâ were made by the firm.
âWhatâs clear from the post mortem is they didnât seem to have the right guardrails in place to prevent this type of incident or to reduce the risk of it occurring,â said cyber-security consultant Daniel Card.
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His thoughts were echoed by cybersecurity researcher Kevin Beaumont, who said the key lesson from CrowdStrikeâs review was that the firm doesnât âtest in wavesâ.
âThey just deploy to all customers at once in a so called ârapid response updateâ which was obviously a huge mistake,â he said.
But Sam Kirkman from cybersecurity firm NetSPI told the BBC the review showed CrowdStrike âtook stepsâ to prevent the outages.
He said these steps âhave likely been effective to prevent incidents on countless occasions prior to last weekâ.
Congress calls
According to insurance firm Parametrix, the top 500 US companies by revenue, excluding Microsoft, had faced some $5.4bn (ÂŁ4.1bn) in financial losses from the outage.
It told Reuters that only $540m (ÂŁ418m) to $1.08bn (ÂŁ840m) of these losses were insured.
Meanwhile, Mr Kurtz has been called to testify in front of Congress about the outage.
âThis incident must serve as a broader warning about the national security risks associated with network dependency,â it said in a letter to Mr Kurtz.
It has given the cybersecurity company until Wednesday evening to respond by scheduling a hearing.
Additional reporting by Joe Tidy