Thanks for reading our rolling coverage of the massive IT outage that caused havoc with software systems around the world, causing laptops to repeatedly crash and display the ‘blue screen of death’.
The country was struck by the crash – described as the largest IT outage in history – at about 3pm on Friday, plunging airports, businesses, services, supermarkets and banks into chaos.
The outage is believed to have been triggered by an update from software security company Crowdstrike.
“We’re deeply sorry for the impact that we’ve caused to customers, to travellers, to anyone affected by this,” CrowdStrike chief executive George Kurtz told the US Today show late this evening.
Jetstar was forced to cancel all its flights in Australia and New Zealand on Friday night, impacting thousands of customers about to fly out for the weekend. Overseas, the global crash forced American Airlines, United and Delta to ask the Federal Aviation Administration ground stop on all flights just after 5pm AEST.
The federal government called a snap meeting of emergency authorities, and executives from Telstra, Optus, Coles, Woolworths, Qantas and Virgin on Friday night to respond to the unfolding chaos.
Read our full report by David Swan and Eryk Bagshaw here.