Russia unaffected by global IT meltdown – ministry
A massive Windows 10 outage linked to the CrowdStrike antivirus platform has hit air traffic control systems, banks, and broadcasters
Russian tech infrastructure has not been affected by the global Windows 10 outage, the Ministry of Digital Development, Communications, and Mass Media has reported. The crisis illustrates the importance of becoming self-sufficient in terms of critical software, the ministry has stressed.
Windows 10 users around the world, including airports, banks and broadcasters, suffered serious failures on Friday, triggered by a recent update of the web/cloud-based CrowdStrike antivirus platform. Problems have been reported in Australia, New Zealand, Japan, India, Germany, Spain, the US, and several other countries.
According to the Russian ministry’s press office, “so far, there have been no reports of crashes at Russian airports,” as quoted by TASS.
“The situation with Microsoft once again demonstrates the significance of import substitution of foreign software, first of all – at critical information infrastructure facilities,” officials added.
The Russian government resolved to lessen the country’s dependence on foreign technologies and goods in 2014, after Western nations imposed sanctions on Moscow over Crimea. With more restrictions put in place following the start of the Ukraine conflict in February 2022, Moscow has doubled down on these efforts.
The BBC, citing aviation analytics firm Cirium, claimed that more than 1,000 flights have been canceled globally due to the outage, with the figure expected to rise. In the US, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has grounded all flights by several major airlines, including Delta, United, and American Airlines.
The Irish carrier Ryanair as well as Turkish Airlines have said they are experiencing problems with ticketing, check-in, and reservation processes.
The massive glitch has also crippled several media outlets, including the UK-based Sky News – which went off air – as well as the Australia-based ABC, SBS, Channel 7, Channel 9, and News Corp Australia.
Meanwhile, George Kurtz, the CEO of Texas-based cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, which is largely being blamed for the situation, has said that the “issue has been identified, isolated, and a fix has been deployed.”
Microsoft 365, which includes a range of popular products such as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, has stated that it “continue[s] to take mitigation actions” to address the outage.
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