At Least 750 US Hospitals Faced Disruptions During Last Year's CrowdStrike Outage, Study Finds (wired.com)
- Reference: 0178433828
- News link: https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/07/21/228202/at-least-750-us-hospitals-faced-disruptions-during-last-years-crowdstrike-outage-study-finds
- Source link: https://www.wired.com/story/at-least-750-us-hospitals-faced-disruptions-during-last-years-crowdstrike-outage-study-finds/
Most services recovered within six hours, though some remained offline for more than 48 hours. CrowdStrike dismissed the study as "junk science," arguing the researchers failed to verify whether affected networks actually ran CrowdStrike software. The researchers defended their methodology, noting they could scan only about one-third of America's hospitals, suggesting the actual impact may have been significantly larger.
[1] https://www.wired.com/story/at-least-750-us-hospitals-faced-disruptions-during-last-years-crowdstrike-outage-study-finds/
[2] https://it.slashdot.org/story/24/07/19/0943232/global-it-outage-linked-to-crowdstrike-update-disrupts-businesses
[3] https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2836824?resultClick=3
Crowdstrike (Score:3)
Seems like Crowdstrike is the one doing the striking.
Maybe people should stop using that shitware.
Re: Crowdstrike (Score:2)
Try to tell that to the management of the company I work for.
Re:Crowdstrike (Score:4, Insightful)
> Maybe people should stop using that shitware.
Cost or outages alone isn't a metric. The question is what is its reduction in incidents, and how much is the cost of not using them. Crowdstrike was nasty, but it's much cheaper than a successful ransomware attack.
We don't think about hospitals (Score:1)
As infrastructure. We think of them as businesses.
In the very near future that is going to bite us very very hard in the ass.
as it stands I am probably you too have lost jobs to people in countries that have universal Health Care like the United Kingdom because the high cost of not maintaining that infrastructure has increased the cost of hiring Americans substantially.
Re: (Score:1)
> We don't think about hospitals as infrastructure. We think of them as businesses.
Because they generally are? 87% of the hospitals in the US are nonfederal, aka. private hospitals running as nonprofits or for-profit.
And nobody learned... (Score:2)
Nobody learned and everyone is still running this crap. And McAfee/Trellix. My work laptop behaves like a machine from 2002 because all of the "security" software constantly eating resources. It would be expensive for companies to actually care about security, so they just all run the same garbage so when they get hacked they can just say..."Whaaat? It's not OUR fault. We were following 'industry standard best-practices'. Don't blame us".
Fix was simple (Score:2)
Fix was simple, go into safe mode, run some dos commands to remove the update, boot up.
The problem was related to having to touch each server.
Running VMs, or servers with IPMI you could handle them remotely and quickly. if you have monitoring you know which servers got affected pretty quickly.
Took me an hour from recognizing the problem to fixing the few servers affected.
Luck and proper systems in place can reduce many outages.
I have to question those that took a long time, unless there are blocker
ESXi hosts where safe but not Hyper-V! (Score:2)
ESXi hosts where safe but not Hyper-V!