Delta CEO says Microsoft is “probably the most fragile platform” after it lost “half a billion dollars in five days” during the CrowdStrike outage
Ed Bastian has “tremendous respect for Microsoft and (CEO) Satya,” but the lack of fortification might force Delta Air Lines to look elsewhere.
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What you need to know
Theglobal digital pandemiccaused by a buggy CrowdStrike kernel driver update thatleft over 8.5 million Windows devices with BSoD errors for hoursmight have been resolved; it consistently places CrowdStrike and Microsoft between a rock and a hard place.
Earlier this week, Delta Air Lines, one of the many companies whose operations were crippled by the global IT outage,hired bigshot attorney David Boies to seek damages amounting to over $350 million from Microsoft and CrowdStrike. While Microsoft wasn’t directly responsible for the massive outage, it’s seemingly bottled up in the whole fiasco alongside CrowdStrike.
More recently, Delta CEO Ed Bastian touched base withCNBCto discuss the digital pandemic that left thousands of passengers stranded across airports. The company reportedly lost between $350 million to $500 million after approximately 7,000 people canceled their flights, coupled with 176,000 refund and reimbursement requests. Delta CEO claims the company incurred costs of more than 40,000 servers that they were forced to tamper with to rest the system.
“When was the last time you heard of a big outage at Apple?” responded Bastian after being asked whether Delta was reconsidering its partnership with Microsoft and CrowdStrike after the massive outage. Bastian indicated Microsoft is “probably the most fragile platform.”
Aside fromthe statement and apology issued by CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtzandthe ‘erroneous’ $10 Uber Eats gift card, affected companies and organizations haven’t been compensated for the losses incurred during the massive outage. However, Microsoft and CrowdStrike have seemingly offered Delta Air Lines free consultation advice.
Delta is among the first companies impacted by the massive outage to seek compensation. However, CrowdStrike shareholders have seemingly joined the fray earlier this week by filing a proposed class action (viaReuters).
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Delta is looking beyond Microsoft and CrowdStrike for ‘exceptional’ customer service
Delta CEO mentioned big tech corporations likeMicrosoft have seemingly shifted their focus to generative AI efforts, leaving little room for the rest of their core services. He added that both companies have failed to deliver “exceptional” service to their existing customer base.
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According to Delta CEO Ed Bastian:
“If you’re going to have priority access to the Delta ecosystem… you’ve gotta test this stuff. You can’t come into a mission-critical, 24-7 operation and tell us, ‘We have a bug.’ It doesn’t work.”
“I have tremendous respect for Microsoft and Satya, but they are building the future and must make sure they fortify the current,” says Delta CEO Ed Bastian. “We thought we had the best (fortification) between Microsoft and CrowdStrike.”
Microsoftand CrowdStrike have elaborate measures to prevent the issue from reoccurring, includingrestricting security software like CrowdStrike’s Falcon from accessing Windows 11 at a kernel level. Apple similarly restricts third-party developers from accessing its operating system at the kernel level.
According to a report byThe Wall Street Journal, a Microsoft spokesman indicated the firm “cannot legally wall off its operating system in the same way Apple does because of an understanding it reached with the European Commission following a complaint.” However, the EU refuted the claims while speaking toThe Vergeand indicated, “Microsoft is free to decide on its business model and to adapt its security infrastructure to respond to threats provided this is done in line with EU competition law.”
Kevin Okemwa is a seasoned tech journalist based in Nairobi, Kenya with lots of experience covering the latest trends and developments in the industry at Windows Central. With a passion for innovation and a keen eye for detail, he has written for leading publications such as OnMSFT, MakeUseOf, and Windows Report, providing insightful analysis and breaking news on everything revolving around the Microsoft ecosystem. You’ll also catch him occasionally contributing at iMore about Apple and AI. While AFK and not busy following the ever-emerging trends in tech, you can find him exploring the world or listening to music.