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Post by n1david on Jul 19, 2024 12:57:21 GMT
WhatsOnStage is reporting that multiple theatres are unable to offer full box office services because of the Crowdstrike IT failure earlier today. www.whatsonstage.com/news/many-uk-theatres-affected-by-microsoft-bug_1616028/The theatre I'm booked at tonight reports on its website "We are currently impacted by the widespread IT outage affecting our ticketing system. Tonight’s performance will go ahead, unless further unforeseen circumstances develop, and at present you can book tickets online. However we are currently unable to take ticket bookings by phone or in person." - those "further unforeseen circumstances" sound fairly ominous. The NT seems in a worse state as they are reorting that ticket sales and exchanges are unavailable online or by phone (presumably, in person is OK). Has anyone seen any reports of actual show cancellations yet?
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Post by blamerobots on Jul 19, 2024 13:04:50 GMT
NT's Grapes of Wrath has been cancelled tonight, but it appears to be more show-related than IT-related.
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Post by interval99 on Jul 19, 2024 13:55:05 GMT
At present it seems the ABBA abbatars are safe and ready to perform tonight and even the ticketmaster site is open to book tickets for it.
Hope no board members got hit by travel or medical appointments issues due to the problem.
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Post by d'James on Jul 19, 2024 15:50:24 GMT
I went with someone to a medical appointment and it’s mostly working.
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Post by TallPaul on Jul 19, 2024 16:02:43 GMT
It was wonderfully ironic to arrive at work this morning to discover that the IT helpdesk was having IT problems.
As it is rarely able to help anyway, I'm not sure anyone would have noticed a difference!
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Post by david on Jul 19, 2024 16:51:25 GMT
It was wonderfully ironic to arrive at work this morning to discover that the IT helpdesk was having IT problems. As it is rarely able to help anyway, I'm not sure anyone would have noticed a difference! TallPaul - did you offer them the normal IT help desk question - “Have you tried switching it on and off again ?” That’s our IT support go to response!
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Post by Jon on Jul 19, 2024 16:59:02 GMT
I clearly had a good day because i wasn't affected at all.
Someone at Microsoft is getting a good telling off, that is for sure.
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Post by n1david on Jul 19, 2024 18:00:22 GMT
Except the problem wasn’t at Microsoft at all. The problem was in a third party app which pushed an update to all its users which broke Windows startup. The media focused on Microsoft initially because they’d had an unrelated cloud problem last night, but the update that brought down all these systems wasn’t a Microsoft product, wasn’t pushed to computers by Microsoft and needed Crowdstrike, not Microsoft, to come up with a fix.
Microsoft’s PR must be tearing their hair out.
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Post by SilverFox on Jul 19, 2024 18:21:05 GMT
But MS has to take responsibility for allowing a 3rd party to break their start-up. In the race for profitability, combined with ever-increasing complex technology, the "system" fails on many occasions, not usually on this scale. Adobe is notorious for pushing out insufficiently tested updates. Banks, Air Traffic Control, the NHS et al, have cut corners resulting in massive disruption. The compensation, if any, is usually paltry - people missing flights today are apparently not covered by their insurance, and the standard delay payouts are not to be made.
MS PR may well be tearing their hair out, but the company itself (and the wider IT world) really needs to look at its protocols.
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Post by n1david on Jul 19, 2024 18:28:47 GMT
But Microsoft doesn’t operate a walled garden. All the system administrators in all these companies authorised automatic updates to all their PCs without considering whether one of those updates would do damage.
Sure, it would be nice if MS systems were more robust, but the bottom line is this is a third party product that corporate customers put their absolute faith in. MS can’t police all the software that runs on Windows.
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Post by blamerobots on Jul 19, 2024 20:13:31 GMT
Yes, it isn't Microsoft's fault at all.
A TL;DR would be that Crowdstrike are a company which make an anti-virus software, which is used a lot by other high-profile companies to protect their system infrastructure. They pushed an update that broke everything, so are trying to fix it.
What's happened is an update was pushed out to the software, and because anti-virus software always has to stay up-to-date to tackle newer threats, the update was downloaded on start-up as is required.
However, there is a bug in this update which has somehow made it through stress-testing and has been released to the public as part of an update. Now, when a system updates the software, and this bug is triggered, it brings it down fatally.
Hence why everything went down at the same time. Unless you use Crowdstrike anti-virus, this isn't going to affect you at all. It's mostly affected businesses and companies which use the software on their servers and employee computers.
But for some reason, it seemed like it was mistakenly reported as an issue with a Windows update (which it isn't) so I reckon their PR team is running around picking up the pieces. It is more of a PR disaster for Crowdstrike who likely won't be seeing business anytime soon. How you push out an update without testing it intensively and seeing, like, whether it actually WORKS is baffling. There's supposed to be hundreds and hundreds of protections against something like this happening but it seemed it got past it or none of them worked properly.
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Post by happysooz2 on Jul 19, 2024 22:06:06 GMT
Mnemonic managed to incorporate a very on the nose joke about the outage in the show tonight.
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