Microsoft Corp attributes the “blue screen of death,” which struck commercial operations worldwide, affecting 8.5 million Windows systems, to Crowdstrike Failure.
As The Wall Street Journal reported, a Microsoft spokesperson attributed the recent Crowdstrike failure to a 2009 regulatory agreement between Microsoft and the European Union.
The spokesperson asserted that Microsoft consented to grant external security developers the same level of access to interact with the software as Microsoft, which would facilitate the existence of critical flaws.
According to Patrick Wardle, the CEO of DoubleYou, monolithic ecosystems, such as Apple’s MacOS, are more resilient to critical errors due to their walled-off architecture. Apple revoked comparable security certifications for its operating system in 2020, protecting it from coding conflicts and third-party security failures.
Crowdstrike Failure that brought the world to its knees
The world was struck by what has been referred to as “the largest information technology outage in history” between July 18 and July 19. The global IT outage, which halted operations at financial institutions, airports, emergency services, and media broadcasting networks, affected approximately 8.5 million Windows systems.
An upgrade bug associated with CrowdStrike, a third-party security firm, was the primary cause of the collapse. George Kurtz, CEO of CrowdStrike, emphasized in an update that the downtime was not the result of a breach or malicious exploit. He advised users to use official Crowdtrike support channels and update their affected software through the security firm’s portal. The CEO also assured the public that the issue had been identified and resolved.
Solution Is Decentralized Blockchain Architecture.
After the critical system’s failure, the crypto community utilized social media to emphasize the security vulnerabilities inherent in centralized systems and mitigated by distributed computing systems.
Jameson Lopp, co-founder of Casa, a Bitcoin wallet service, utilized the high-profile outage to demonstrate why Bitcoin’s fundamental software does not auto-update. He stated, “Auto-updates introduce systemic risk.”
Senator Cynthia Lummis, a steadfast proponent of decentralized technologies, reiterated the sentiments expressed by blockchain software developers. The Republican lawmaker cited Bitcoin’s resilience during the critical software debacle as evidence of its superior architecture compared to current centralized systems with single points of failure and other performance bottlenecks.