Crowdstrike has been the talk of the town for the past month for causing a massive global IT outage that left work disruptions worldwide, leading to companies losing billions due to the shutdown. Initially, it was revealed that faulty cybersecurity led to a massive mess, but after facing a tsunami of lawsuits from various companies, the cybersecurity firm has decided to explain in detail the root cause and the steps it is taking to ensure a similar mishap does not happen in the future.
Last month was rough for Crowdstrike, given how a mistake on their end led to a massive global IT outage. The impact of this outage still looms for some industries. It caused major work disruptions for health care, banks, and airlines and even halted some emergencies.
Since all the major corporations use and are associated with the company's security services, the crashed windows led to some major financial losses incurred by these companies. The troubles for the security service provider seem to be never-ending, as the company is now facing tons of lawsuits for causing an estimated $5 billion in financial losses.
Amidst growing concerns and legal pursuits, Crowdstrike has now explained in detail in a report the root cause of the faulty update and how the issue was not spotted in testing before it was rolled out globally. The company was working on making it easier to update security threats on client computers, and for this, it tried a new method that would allow for threats to be detected in real time. The crash happened when Crowdstrike sent an update with 20 pieces of data instead of the 21 data points required, leading to the system crashing due to the error.
The second question was how the testing did not
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