American Airlines Warns Of Impact On Its Flight Schedule From Global technology outage

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Earlier this morning, a widespread technology issue with a vendor impacted multiple airlines, including American. Our teams have been working diligently to resolve the issue with the vendor and take care of our customers.

As of 5 a.m. ET, we were able to safely reestablish our operation.

We expect there will be impact to our flight schedule today, including delays and cancellations.

American will notify customers whose flight plans are affected via the American Airlines app or text message. Please continue to check the American Airlines app or aa.com for the latest on flight statuses.

To provide additional flexibility, American issued a travel alert, allowing customers whose travel plans are affected by this issue to rebook without fees, cancel or receive a refund. Visit aa.com/travelalerts for details.

Customers can change their flights on aa.com by retrieving their reservation. If a customer booked their flight through a travel agency or website other than aa.com, a representative from that company will be able to assist with changes.

We apologize to our customers for the inconvenience and are working quickly to resume normal operations.

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 REUTERS- A worldwide tech outage crippled industries from travel to finance on Friday before services started coming back online after hours of disruption, highlighting the risks of a global shift towards digital, interconnected technologies.

A software update by global cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike (CRWD.O), opens new tab appeared to have triggered systems problems that grounded flights, forced some broadcasters off air and left customers without access to services such as healthcare or banking.

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CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said on social media platform X that a defect was found “in a single content update for Windows hosts” that affected Microsoft’s (MSFT.O), opens new tab customers and that a fix was being deployed.

Microsoft said later on Friday that the issue had been fixed.

“We’re deeply sorry for the impact that we’ve caused to customers, to travellers, to anyone affected by this, including our company,” Kurtz told NBC News’ “Today” programme.

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“Many of the customers are rebooting the system and it’s coming up and it’ll be operational,” Kurtz said. “It could be some time for some systems that won’t automatically recover.”

But even as companies and institutions began restoring regular services, experts said the cyber outage revealed the risks of an increasingly online world.

“This is a very, very uncomfortable illustration of the fragility of the world’s core Internet infrastructure,” said Ciaran Martin, professor at Oxford University’s Blavatnik School of Government and former head of the UK National Cyber Security Centre. While the core problem appeared simple, which should make it short-lived, its immediate impact was remarkable, Martin said.

“I’m struggling to think of an outage at quite this scale.”

Accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, governments and businesses alike have become increasingly dependent on a handful of interconnected technology companies over the past two decades, which explains why one software issue rippled far and wide.

DISRUPTION

Spain's Aena reports computer systems 'incident' at all Spanish airports

Early on Friday, major U.S. airlines – American Airlines (AAL.O), opens new tab, Delta Air Lines (DAL.N), opens new tab and United Airlines (UAL.O), opens new tab – grounded flights, while other carriers and airports around the world reported delays and disruptions.

Banks and financial services companies from Australia to India and Germany warned customers of disruptions and traders across markets spoke of problems executing transactions.

“We are having the mother of all global market outages,” one trader said.

In Britain, booking systems used by doctors were offline, multiple reports posted on X by medical officials said, while Sky News, one of the country’s major news broadcasters, was taken off air and apologised for being unable to transmit live. Soccer club Manchester United said on X that it had to postpone a scheduled release of tickets.

Airports from Los Angeles to Singapore, Hong Kong, Amsterdam and Berlin said some airlines were having to check in passengers manually, causing delays.

Government agencies were also affected with the Dutch and United Arab Emirates’ foreign ministries reporting some disruptions.

As the day progressed, more and more companies reported a return to normal service, including Spanish airport operator Aena (AENA.MC), opens new tab, U.S. carriers American Airlines, Frontier and Spirit (SAVE.N), opens new tab, Dubai International Airport operator and Australia’s Commonwealth Bank (CBA.AX), opens new tab.

LSEG Group (LSEG.L), opens new tab also said its data and services were back up and running after an outage that caused some disruption across financial markets.

Still, industry experts weighed the potential impact for the sector of what one called the biggest ever IT outage.

“IT security tools are all designed to ensure that companies can continue to operate in the worst-case scenario of a data breach, so to be the root cause of a global IT outage is an unmitigated disaster,” said Ajay Unni, CEO of StickmanCyber, one of Australia’s largest cybersecurity services companies.

U.S.-based CrowdStrike, with a market value of about $83 billion, is among leading cybersecurity companies, counting more than 20,000 subscribers around the world, its website shows.

Its shares were down 14.5% shortly after the Wall Street open, while its cyber rivals were up, with SentinelOne more than 10% higher and Palo Alto Networks up 2.6%. Microsoft was down almost 1.5%.

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Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise, Kirsten Donovan

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