This blog is a repost from route-fifty.com.

COMMENTARY | As our dependency on technology and energy increases, state and local leaders need to take a hard look at their disaster recovery and business plans.

At the height of the summer travel season last month, thousands of flights worldwide were halted and hundreds of thousands of travelers stranded for days all due to a faulty software update to a seemingly secure area within Microsoft operating systems by the cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike. The update impacted IT systems globally, affecting around 8.5 million Windows devices. Although the affected devices represented less than 1% of all Windows machines, the disruption was significant due to the critical services it upended. Aside from airlines, the outage impacted federal, state and local government entities.

The Crowdstrike debacle is far from the only example of technology failing. Just a few weeks later, the District of Columbia’s 911 Emergency Communications Center—the nation’s fourth largest by volume—was knocked offline for up to six hours because of a faulty software update.


Read the full article at route-fifty.com