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Global IT snarl puts cyber firm CrowdStrike in spotlight

Wall Street’s reaction to CrowdStrike’s monumental gaffe was swift: Its shares tanked as much as 15% in New York trading on Friday, wiping out almost $8 billion of its market value. The company is still worth nearly $80 billion. 

Long lines of passengers file into TSA checkpoint at Long Beach Airport on Friday morning after planes were grounded by an internation software issue. Photo: Brittany Solo, SCNG
Long lines of passengers file into TSA checkpoint at Long Beach Airport on Friday morning after planes were grounded by an internation software issue. Photo: Brittany Solo, SCNG
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By Jordan Robertson and Shona Ghosh, Bloomberg

Behind a massive IT failure that grounded flights, upended markets and disrupted corporations around the world is one cybersecurity company: CrowdStrike Holdings Inc.

Known as a dominant supplier of software that protects businesses from ransomware attacks, CrowdStrike was thrust into the spotlight on Friday as it struggled to fix a faulty patch that led to cascading, system-wide failures, paralyzing the operations of clients ranging from banks to global retail giants to health-care systems.

Related: LAX, John Wayne and Long Beach flights temporarily grounded; ports disrupted

Wall Street’s reaction to CrowdStrike’s monumental gaffe was swift: Its shares tanked as much as 15% in New York trading on Friday, wiping out almost $8 billion of its market value. The company is still worth nearly $80 billion.

CrowdStrike was founded in Irvine in 2011 by former executives of antivirus pioneer McAfee Inc. It has grown into the leading maker of a relatively new type of security software that’s considered among the best defenses against ransomware and other hacking threats. It controls about 18% of the $12.6 billion global market for so-called “modern” endpoint protection software, behind archrival Microsoft Corp.’s 25.8% market share, according to market research firm IDC.

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The company’s growth has bucked the broader trend in cybersecurity, with the firm reporting blockbuster earnings in its most recent quarter. Chief Executive Officer George Kurtz used the opportunity to take potshots at its larger rival, saying in June that CrowdStrike’s technology “creates a wide competitive moat” in the cyber sector, where Microsoft has $20 billion in annual revenue. After a US Department of Homeland Security report faulted Microsoft security failings, Kurtz said CrowdStrike had received an “outpouring of requests.”

“There’s a widespread crisis of confidence among security and IT teams within the Microsoft security customer base,” he said.

The type of software CrowdStrike supplies is separate and distinct from older, more limited types of security software. Traditional antivirus software was useful in the early days of computing and the internet for their ability to hunt for signs of known malware, but it has fallen out of favor as attacks have become more sophisticated. Now, products known as “endpoint detection and response” software that CrowdStrike develops do far more, continually scanning machines for any signs of suspicious activities and automating a response.

But to do this, these programs have to be given access to inspect the very core of the computers’ operating systems for security defects. This access gives them the ability to disrupt the very systems they are trying to protect. And it is how Microsoft’s Windows systems came into play in Friday’s outage.

Representatives of Austin, Texas-based CrowdStrike confirmed online reports that a glitchy update was responsible for disabling potentially millions of corporate and government Windows computers around the world and causing the dreaded “blue screen of death.”

The company pegged the incident to “a defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts,” in a statement on Friday and said the outage wasn’t down to a cyberattack or security breach. Anyone using a Mac or Linux machine isn’t impacted, the company said, adding that “a fix has been deployed.”

To add to the confusion, an apparently separate incident involving Microsoft’s Azure cloud services also caused disruption on Friday. In a status update, Microsoft said it had fixed the underlying issue but that users would continue to experience “residual impact.”

While cybersecurity professionals say CrowdStrike’s technology is a strong way to defend against ransomware, its cost — which in some cases can be more than $50 per machine — means that most organizations don’t install it on all of their computers. What that means, however, is that the computers that have the software installed on them are among the most important to protect, and if they go down, key services can fall with them.

Now that CrowdStrike’s fix is out, any Windows desktop or laptop machine with the CrowdStrike product affected by the initial flawed update will need to be updated.

How laborious that process is will depend on whether CrowdStrike can roll out the fix automatically, or whether every machine will need to be manually rebooted. In an interview with CNBC on Friday, CrowdStrike’s Chief Executive Officer George Kurtz said the company was looking for ways to automate the steps involved, suggesting at least some customers are stuck with manual fixes for now. The company also has addressed the software update at the root of the issue, Kurtz said.

“It was a content bug, or update, that we sent out and we’ve identified, and that we’ve rolled back,” Kurtz said in an interview with CNBC on Friday. He apologized to affected customers, and said some systems would take a few hours to come back online while others would take longer.

That means affected entities – from banks to bourses to shipping ports – might take days to fully come back online, according to Alan Woodward, professor of cybersecurity at the University of Surrey.

“To use the laptops, they’ll have to manually intervene — that is a big job,” Woodward said in an earlier interview with Bloomberg News.

There’s also the question of how the bad rollout happened to begin with.

“CrowdStrike is meant to keep these machines safe,” Woodward said. “This is the sort of thing ransomware would do, but imagine ransomware simultaneously hitting the biggest organizations in the world — container ports in the Baltics, hospitals, railway stations, they’ve all been hit at once because of this one little file.”

CrowdStrike’s customer base comprises large organizations that have a large number of remote machines to manage, he said. “The economic impact is going to be huge.”

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