CrowdStrike Outage Yields Mixed Impacts on Big Law
"I'm hearing of more West Coast latencies than on the East Coast," said one Am Law 100 executive. "It really depends where [the office] is regionally, whether they're experiencing the same symptoms even within the same firm."
July 19, 2024 at 04:30 PM
5 minute read
What You Need to Know
- Law firms and courts across the country faced additional delays and challenges in operating Friday following an outage at CrowdStrike, a popular cybersecurity tool.
- Firm leaders noted regional variances in the impact of the outages, with one executive observing greater delays for firms on the West Coast.
- Thus far, firms have not found any signs of a cyberattack compounding delays caused by the software.
Attorneys in firms large and small woke up Friday to notifications of potential computer delays and access issues thanks to an outage at CrowdStrike, a popular cybersecurity tool that released a faulty update for computers running on Windows operating systems Thursday night.
The impacts of the CrowdStrike outage have been felt worldwide, grounding planes, impeding bank operations, and even forcing some local courts to close for the day. The impacts on law firms have been varied, with one Am Law 200 CEO on the West Coast indicating that the firm's servers were back online, albeit with some isolated outages remaining, and another Am Law 100 executive describing issues with delays in emails and document management systems.
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