Major IT outage affecting banks, airlines, media outlets across the world
abc.net.au
All our servers and company laptops went down at pretty much the same time. Laptops have been bootlooping to blue screen of death. It's all very exciting, personally, as someone not responsible for fixing it.
Apparently caused by a bad CrowdStrike update.
Edit: now being told we (who almost all generally work from home) need to come into the office Monday as they can only apply the fix in-person. We'll see if that changes over the weekend...
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Been at work since 5AM... finally finished deleting the C-00000291*.sys file in CrowdStrike directory.
182 machines total. Thankfully the process in of itself takes about 2-3 minutes. For virtual machines, it's a bit of a pain, at least in this org.
lmao I feel kinda bad for those companies that have 10k+ endpoints to do this to. Eff... that. Lot's of immediate short term contract hires for that, I imagine.
How do you deal with places with thousands of remote endpoints??
That's one of those situations where they need to immediately hire local contractors to those remote sites. This outage literally requires touching the equipment. lol
I'd even say, fly out each individual team member to those sites.. but even the airports are down.
Call the remote people in, deputize anyone who can work a command line, and prioritize the important stuff.
Can you program some keyboard-presenting device to automate this? Still requires plugging in something of course...what a mess.
Yeah, there are USB sticks that identify as keyboards and run every keystroke saved in a text file on its memory in sequence. Neat stuff. The primary use case is of course corrupting systems or bruteforcing passwords without touching anything... But they work really well for executing scripts semi-automated.
Yep I have one of these, I think it's called tiny. Very similar to an Arduino, and very easy to program.
I think sysadmins union should be created today