We examine the recent CrowdStrike outage and provide a technical overview of the root cause.| Microsoft Security Blog
Customers will be given more control over when and where content is downloaded to reduce the risk of similar incidents in future.| CSO Online
CIOs are looking at ways to avoid single points of failure and are re-evaluating their cloud strategies to prevent any 'blue screen of death' incidents.| CIO
Attempts to mitigate a novel Windows threat caused systems running CrowdStrike’s Falcon sensor to crash.| CSO Online
A bad software update from security software vendor CrowdStrike has paralyzed Windows machines around the world.| CSO Online
As the IT world recovers from the massive outage triggered by CrowdStrike’s Falcon update, CISOs and CIOs would be wise to keep a running ledger of lessons learned. Here are some initial considerations.| CSO Online
The global CrowdStrike meltdown shows what you risk when IT operations depend on a single point of failure. Reconsider your organization’s cloud concentration risk tolerance and define a strategy to match.| CIO
On July 18, CrowdStrike, an independent cybersecurity company, released a software update that began impacting IT systems globally. Although this was not a Microsoft incident, given it impacts our ecosystem, we want to provide an update on the steps we’ve taken with CrowdStrike and others to remediate and support our customers. Since this event began,...| The Official Microsoft Blog