Tech meltdown: Could our digital infrastructure bring us down?



In the late 1990s, IT experts feared a theoretical “Y2K bug” would trigger widespread technology failures as the calendar changed from 1999 to 2000. With so many systems linked around the globe, many feared one coding error could end it all. Thankfully, that tech-pocalypse never arrived, but a similar cascading failure finally did last month.

On July 19, cybersecurity vendor CrowdStrike pushed a small update to systems using its wildly popular Falcon platform. The company realized it contained a coding error and sent a corrected update just 79 minutes later. By then, it was too late. The result wasn’t exactly Y2K, but it created what many consider the largest IT outage in history.

A Y2K outage might have delayed emails or access to an ATM, but an outage today affects everything from medical care to our food supply to our power grid.

CrowdStrike Falcon is widely used by organizations across many large and small industries. The company’s reputation was excellent, thanks to a decade of identifying sophisticated cybercriminals from countries such as China, North Korea, and Russia. This made its platform nearly ubiquitous, which only heightened the damage caused by its fatal update. As did its tight integration with Microsoft Windows OS.

The company had inadvertently introduced a logic error, crashing not only Falcon but entire Windows systems. Although CrowdStrike quickly corrected the problem, many of the systems had shut down for good. You can’t update an offline computer.

Microsoft estimated that fewer than 1% of Windows devices were directly affected, but those were the systems running critical operations elsewhere and heavily interconnected with other Windows devices.

A real-world cascading failure mirrored the digital linking of the internet. The impact was shocking.

Delta, United, and American Airlines had to cancel hundreds of flights, as did many other airlines and airports around the globe. Public transit in New York City, Washington, D.C., and other cities was shut down. Banks, hospitals, and 911 emergency services also failed. British broadcaster Sky News was knocked off the air.

According to one insurer’s analysis, one bad line of code will cost Fortune 500 companies more than $5 billion in direct losses. Lawsuits are already being drafted.

A failure of this magnitude should have been one of the most covered stories of the decade. Wedged between the failed Trump assassination attempt and Kamala’s quiet coup of President Biden, however, it made only a little splash in the media. I read more coverage from friends and families sleeping on airport floors than I did from legacy media.

While the CrowdStrike disaster took many by surprise, the most surprising thing was that it hadn’t happened earlier. DHS’ Office of Cyber and Infrastructure Analysis warned in 2016 of how susceptible our digital dependencies made us. Analysts had contemplated an attack from a hostile regime, but even that assessment wasn’t as dire as what resulted from the July 19 software update. According to the OCIA report, the most vulnerable systems are:

Cyber-physical technology which allows physical objects to communicate with a computer network. One example is the Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack of 2021 that triggered a run on gasoline because of a perceived shortage that never came to pass.

The Global Positioning System is regularly interrupted in war zones such as Ukraine and the Middle East. There is a growing reliance on this technology for autonomous vehicles, mapping, and military targeting.

Smart cities integrate tech and infrastructure to improve environmental and economic efficiency. These include features such as interconnected power grids, traffic management, water delivery, waste services — even governmental tasks.

The internet of things connects various devices to larger networks, such as home appliances, cars, and production lines. After recent home upgrades, my thermostat texted me and my dishwasher emailed me. Thanks, Silicon Valley.

Cloud technology poses significant security challenges through its endless entry points. The OCIA singled out airlines as particularly vulnerable since the industry “relies on cloud systems for scheduling passengers, flights, and cargo.” That prediction came true last month.

Although the incident was a disaster to travelers and companies’ bottom lines, it was an overdue wake-up call to the private and public sectors. Our tech needs to be more resilient, including far more backups and redundancies. Large organizations must diversify their software portfolios so that one company pushing one update doesn’t cripple entire sectors.

The CrowdStrike outage revealed the inherent danger of over-reliance on single sources of technology. Putting all your eggs in one basket has never been a good idea.

Our adversaries are undoubtedly studying what happened on July 19 and planning accordingly. Any attack against our critical infrastructure would unfold much like the CrowdStrike outage: One failure triggers a cascade of system failures. Together, those overwhelm our ability to respond, causing even more damage.

A Y2K outage might have delayed emails or access to an ATM, but an outage today affects everything from medical care to our food supply to our power grid. And even though July's was an accidental failure, malicious actors quickly leveraged the incident for cybercrime.

CrowdStrike prioritized speed over safety and quality assurance. The global release of a single update brought much of the digital world to its knees. Big businesses and governments around the world should take advantage of this opportunity to see how dependent we are on technology, accept the risks that brings, and prepare for the next cascading failure — because there will be another.

Rumor has it an elite-owned firm shorted Trump stock the day before the attempted assassination. Could it be true?



When it comes to Trump’s almost-assassination, the nation is still very much in the dark. Questions need answering, but that’s not really happening. People, therefore, are left to self-investigate and come to their own conclusions.

Right now, there’s a conspiracy theory circulating about a firm linked to George Soros, BlackRock, and the Bush family shorting the stock for the Trump Media & Technology Group on the day before the attempted Trump assassination.

Author and former investment banker Carol Roth joins Glenn Beck on the show to shed light on the theory.

Did These Global Elites PREDICT the Trump Assassination Attempt?www.youtube.com

“This is what I found based on publicly available information,” she begins.

The firm in question, Austin Private Wealth, had to file a 13F, which is a “disclosure filing that’s required quarterly from any investment manager that has more than one hundred million dollars in assets.”

Since “it takes a little bit of time to gather the data” for a 13F, it’s “usually filed within a few weeks after the end of the quarter,” Roth explains.

“The filing for Austin Wealth as of the end of June was made on July 12th,” meaning that the Trump stock was not actually shorted on July 12; it was simply filed on that date.

Second, the firm “had a third-party vendor, according to their press release, that had erroneously misstated their positions,” Roth continues.

Apparently “for the Trump Media Group, instead of putting 12 contracts, which represented 1200 shares ... it showed that they had 12 million share equivalents.”

“That sounds a little sketchy ... but they did that on every single call and put option that they had listed,” Roth clarifies, adding that “this was a clear error across the board.”

Skeptical, Roth “went back and checked all of the previous filings,” and she found that “in all of the previous filings, they had a normalized number of contracts being shown, so it was clear this was a mistake, and it was an outlier.”

With the Austin Private Wealth conspiracy theory essentially debunked, Glenn then asks Roth about the CrowdStrike outage scandal.

To hear her opinion on whether the debacle was “intentional,” a poor “test run,” or “incompetence,” watch the clip above.

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CrowdStrike, the firm causing a global computer crash, is a WEF partner, largest shareholder is Vanguard



CrowdStrike's massive blunder, which resulted in worldwide outages, has brought the company back on the radar of the American citizenry, who now remembers its work with the World Economic Forum, Vanguard, and the Democratic Party.

On July 19, 2024, CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said that a "defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts" had led to a major breakdown in Microsoft operations.

This resulted in more than 18,000 flights being grounded across the globe, including 1,200 in the United States.

What's more, the crash brings the company back into the spotlight for yet another negative reason: The company has been synonymous with the political sphere for the better part of the last decade.

'Why didn't they allow the FBI in to investigate the server? I mean, there is so many things that nobody writes about.'

Many will remember CrowdStrike's appearance in headlines during the 2016 electoral campaign when the cyber-security company was called upon to investigate the alleged hacks of the DNC servers. The timeline of its collaboration with government entities is just as troubling today as it was then.

According to CrowdStrike's own timeline, "Russian intelligence gained access" to DNC networks at the "beginning of July 2015."

On July 13, 2015, CrowdStrike announced a $100 million investment led by firm Google Capital.

In September 2015, the FBI allegedly contacted the DNC to inform Democrats of a hack.

Months later, in 2016, CrowdStrike said it was hired by the Democratic Party to investigate an alleged hack that resulted in the release of the John Podesta emails, revealing Hillary Clinton's email server. By this point, the company already had former FBI employees on its payroll for some time.

This included Shawn Henry, executive assistant director of the Criminal, Cyber, Response, and Services Branch, who joined CrowdStrike in 2012.

CrowdStrike also announced on April 18, 2024, that it had hired Steven Chabinsky, a former deputy assistant director of the FBI Cyber Division, as its general counsel and chief risk officer.

CrowdStrike said it was contacted by the DNC on April 30, 2016, to collect intelligence and analyze the breach. The company added that the DNC was alerted about the hack by the FBI, but CrowdStrike was hired because the FBI doesn't "perform incident response or network remediation services when organizations need to get back to business."

CrowdStrike concluded on June 14, 2016, that Russia was "behind the DNC hack" and that its claim was "supported by the U.S. Intelligence community and also by independent Congressional reports."

This, of course, led to the "Russia, Russia, Russia" investigation into Donald Trump by a special counsel headed by Robert Mueller.

Trump was asked about CrowdStrike in April 2017 surrounding the leak of the Podesta emails. The implication was that Ukraine possibly possessed information that would clear Russia of any wrongdoing in relation to the hacks.

"They shouldn't have allowed it to get out. If they had the proper defensive devices on their internet, you know, equipment, they wouldn't even allow the FBI," Trump said. He then questioned why the FBI didn't investigate the hacks themselves.

"How about this — they get hacked, and the FBI goes to see them, and they won't let the FBI see their server. But do you understand, nobody ever writes it. Why wouldn't (former Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John) Podesta and Hillary Clinton allow the FBI to see the server? They brought in another company that I hear is Ukrainian-based."

"CrowdStrike?" an Associated Press reporter asked.

"That's what I heard. I heard it’s owned by a very rich Ukrainian, that’s what I heard. But they brought in another company to investigate the server. Why didn't they allow the FBI in to investigate the server? I mean, there is so many things that nobody writes about. It's incredible."

Then-President Trump mentioned the company by name in his phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the same phone call that led to his impeachment.

"I would like you to find out what happened with this whole situation with Ukraine; they say CrowdStrike ... I guess you have one of your wealthy people. ... The server, they say Ukraine has it," Trump said according to CNN. "[William Barr will call] you or your people and I would like you to get to the bottom of it," Trump added.

— (@)

'I wish I could say I was surprised, but I'm not.'

Not to be forgotten, CrowdStrike has been involved with the World Economic Forum for some time.

In August 2015, the WEF named it a "Technology Pioneer" for "driving visionary leadership and long-standing market value."

In 2020, the WEF started its partnership against cybercrime with a stated goal of "harness[ing] AI to Combat Cybercrime."

CrowdStrike is one of the companies involved in the partnership.

— (@)

Also, Americans may be interested in learning that investment giant Vanguard is the largest shareholder of CrowdStrike shares, with a combined 12.41% ownership between Vanguard and Vanguard Index Funds. BlackRock also has ownership but at less than 1%.

“I wish I could say I was surprised, but I'm not," Return's Peter Gietl said of Vanguard's ownership. "Unfortunately BlackRock and Vanguard have bought up large stakes in many of the most important companies around the world. It becomes more and more clear that the 'free market' is a mirage on the macro level, and a few select, deep state approved companies have captured control of most industries," Gietl continued.

"What's particularly concerning about this outage is that CrowdStrike had kernel access to most of the systems around the world. This seems very dangerous, allowing a hacker or an accident to crash systems around the world. Never mind that a WEF partner has that level of system access," he added.

It should also be noted that Nancy Pelosi owns significant shares in CrowdStrike, having purchased between $500,000 and $1,000,000 worth of shares in 2020.

A page called Nancy Pelosi Stock Tracker, which monitors the politician's extremely profitable trading, claimed that she owns "millions in Crowdstrike."

Friendly reminder, Pelosi owns millions in Crowdstrike 💅
— Nancy Pelosi Stock Tracker ♟ (@PelosiTracker_) July 19, 2024

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CrowdStrike CEO apologizes for faulty software update that apparently caused global economic mayhem



The leader of one of the largest cybersecurity enterprises in the world has apologized after a faulty software update apparently brought global airline industries and many online transactions to a grinding halt.

Before 6 a.m. on Friday, George Kurtz — CEO of Texas-based cybersecurity giant CrowdStrike — took to social media to acknowledge that "a defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts" had led to a major breakdown in Microsoft operations.

As a result, more than 18,000 flights from around the world were grounded, 1,200 in the U.S. alone, according to joint reporting from The Hill and the AP. Banks and 911 dispatch stations were also thrown offline. Even the Sphere in Las Vegas was affected, projecting the dreaded "blue screen of death" into the night sky.

While CrowdStrike's update issue may have inconvenienced millions of people worldwide, it is apparently not the work of malicious actors, at least according to Kurtz. "This is not a security incident or cyberattack," he insisted.

Neither Mac nor Linux systems was affected by the issue, Kurtz noted.

In follow-up statements to the media, Kurtz became emotional as he apologized for causing everyone so much trouble. "We’re deeply sorry for the impact that we’ve caused to customers, to travelers, to anyone affected by this," he told NBC's "Today."

According to Kurtz, the initial problem has been fixed. However, the reverberating effects of the issue are much more complex and therefore much more difficult to address, he said.

"Sometimes, some systems won’t automatically recover," he said.

"We’re not going to relent until we get every customer back to where they were."

As of mid-morning on Friday, several major U.S. airports — including Logan Airport in Boston, LaGuardia in New York City, and the Las Vegas airport formally known as McCarran — reported significant closures. Flights at other airports such as Hartsfield-Jackson in Atlanta were delayed by as much as six hours.

The FAA professes to be "closely monitoring" the situation.

"The FAA is closely monitoring a technical issue impacting IT systems at U.S. airlines," the aviation agency tweeted at 5:50 a.m. on Friday. "Several airlines have requested FAA assistance with ground stops until the issue is resolved. Monitor http://fly.faa.gov for updates."

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Exclusive: Spygate Researchers Said Claim Russians Hacked The DNC Could Have Relied On ‘Spoofed’ Data

Documents obtained by The Federalist raise concerns about the validity of CrowdStrike’s analysis of the DNC hack.

In Final Days, Trump Gave Up On Releasing Russiagate Files, Nunes Prober Says

The House Intelligence Committee's Kash Patel said senior intelligence officials 'continuously impeded' the documents' release – usually by slow-walking their reviews of the material.

Pelosis Take A Big Stake In CrowdStrike, Democrat-Connected Linchpin Of Russia Probe

With her new investment in CrowdStrike, Nancy Pelosi — the highest-ranking elected official of a party that has promoted Russiagate above all else — is already profiting from its success.