CrowdStrike president says compensation talks over Friday’s global tech outage ‘have to happen’

The cybersecurity company behind a global IT outage that grounded flights, knocked banks offline and sparked chaos for retailers and media organisations admits compensation talks are inevitable.

An estimated 8.5 million Windows devices were taken offline when a flawed software patch was sent to customers by CrowdStrike on Friday.

The Texas-based company’s Australian president Michael Sentonas apologised on Tuesday, saying “we got this very wrong” and “we understand the disruption and the distress that we caused a lot of people”.

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He said CrowdStrike’s “focus” was getting all customers back up and running, but conceded tough conversations about litigation and potential compensation are coming.

“Those conversations have to happen and will happen. That phase will come after we get our customers remediated,” Sentonas told Sky News.

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