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It's already over. The biggest non-crisis ever even if it was the among the most widespread.
That seems overdramatic. I have not noticed any disruption at all; if not for all the headlines this morning I would have never known about this. An upgrade was rolled out and it was fixed. This requires manual intervention of servers, which is why IT exists as a profession in the first place. It's not a crisis like on the order of Covid or 2008, but more like a mass disruption. I think too many people are overreading into this as some sort of harbinger of the awaited collapse, and really it's not.
Airlines were grounded; again, this is a common occurrence. There was a similar incidence as recently as 2023 when many flights were grounded https://www.reuters.com/world/us/why-us-flights-were-grounded-by-faa-system-outage-2023-01-11/
it's bad, no doubt, but the mass-grounding of flights is something that typically happens every 2-3 years.
The fact they are paid so well and exhaustively vetted in the hiring process suggests they are not disposable. Companies invest a lot of resources in new hires . There is also a loss of perspective in that people forget the other 3650 days of the past decade in which there is no major failure, but a single failure is suddenly a major indictment on the entire tech industry, as opposed to something more mundane like a mistake.
Crowdstike stock was only down 11% today, which is far less than expected given that it has been implicated in the greatest IT failure ever. By comparison, Meta stock fell 15% in a day last after it missed the highest of earnings estimates. This is reason to believe it's not as bad as the overly dramatic language would suggest.
One would hope such companies learn from past mistakes, but as tech changes, consequently so do the mistakes. So I can expect incidents like this in the future.
Wikipedia reports that 5.9% flights were cancelled worldwide. It's definitely a lot of flights but also not that much on global perspective.
Twitter had flightradar24 animations showing flights disappearing with Community Notes saying that this animation is fake and not from CrowdStrike fault event. You wouldn't really notice 6% decrease visually or would notice only a slight reduction.
People love to lie on twitter for dramatic effect.
If we assume 6% reduction of global economic activity for one day, it certainly is loss of billions of dollars. And yet it is less than one extra holiday per year.
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I can't help but think about this post that was linked on the SSC reddit a few days ago: https://matt.sh/panic-at-the-job-market
(long, rambly post that I don't fully agree with but it did say a few interesting things) In particular these two quotes:
...
I don't think it's like that at every company, or even the majority. But there are certainly some companies like that. They, in theory, care greatly about their tech workers, because the salaries are high and they have a vague understanding that tech is important. But they don't have a good system for actually hiring good tech workers. And then, once hired, they use them all as generalists, moving quickly from one thing to another, with no chance to actually develop expertise or fix deep underlying issues. And they are never given any kind of decision-making authority in the company, only responsibility to "just fix whatever breaks."
I think that behavior happens the most in companies that are not "tech companies," but still use tech. Banks, airlines, large retailers, that sort of thing. They need tech to function, but it's just a cost center to them- they want to just pay a fixed price per month to "handle tech" and then not think about it ever again. And it seems like those are the ones being bitten in the ass by this thing, because it turns out that running a windows server with third-party antivirus on it with automatic updates is not actually very secure! I wonder if we'll see any restructuring, or if this sort of thing is just going to happen every so often forever, as companies get blindsided by tech issues that they don't understand and never cared to try and understand?
i think the culture of secrecy is the bigger problem. they are paid lot and expected to not blabber to the media if they expect to be employed now or in the future by other companies
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I had a flight canceled today. I am fucking livid. This was over 12 hours after the rollout. Luckily I was able to get rescheduled onto a flight tomorrow, but frankly I have no confidence that that flight will happen either.
I was just going on a silly vacation. I cannot imagine how I would feel if I missed something important. There will never be justice for this. In a fair world, Crowdstrike would be sued into bankruptcy like Purdue Pharma. I'll be lucky if I get a drink voucher out of this.
Are you sure you can get nothing? Last time an airline messed up my connection I got around 800 euros out of it
in the United States, airlines aren't legally required to compensate customers for delays at all. I had a United flight recently delayed by eight hours and received a $15 lunch voucher and $100 in airline credit though.
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