CrowdStrike's legal troubles from last month's massive global computer outage deepened on Johnathan WalkerMonday, as the cybersecurity company was sued by air travelers whose flights were delayed or canceled.
In a proposed class action filed in the Austin, Texas, federal court, three flyers blamed CrowdStrike's negligence in testing and deploying its software for the outage, which also disrupted banks, hospitals and emergency lines around the world.
The plaintiffs said that as flyers scrambled to get to their destinations, many spent hundreds of dollars on lodging, meals and alternative travel, while others missed work or suffered health problems from having to sleep on the airport floor.
They said CrowdStrike should pay compensatory and punitive damages to anyone whose flight was disrupted, after technology-related flight groundings for Southwest Airlines and other carriers in 2023 made the outage "entirely foreseeable."
CrowdStrike lawsuit:Company sued by shareholders over huge software outage
CrowdStrike said in a statement: "We believe this case lacks merit and we will vigorously defend the company."
It provided an identical statement in response to a shareholder lawsuit filed on July 31, after the company's stock price had fallen by about one-third.
The outage stemmed from a flawed software update that crashed more than 8 million computers.
Delta Air Lines has said it may take legal action against Austin-based CrowdStrike after canceling more than 6,000 flights, at a cost of about $500 million.
On Sunday, CrowdStrike said it was neither grossly negligent nor at fault for Delta's problems, and that the Atlanta-based carrier did not accept its offer for help.
Delta faces a U.S. Department of Transportation probe into why it needed more time than rivals to recover from the outage.
Monday's case is del Rio et al v CrowdStrike Inc, U.S. District Court, Western District of Texas, No. 24-00881.
2025-05-01 19:041255 view
2025-05-01 18:471716 view
2025-05-01 18:45681 view
2025-05-01 17:502389 view
2025-05-01 17:362825 view
2025-05-01 17:09917 view
Now wouldn’t this be a treat: Bill Belichick and Robert Kraft back together...as members of the Pro
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden unveiled a $2 trillion clean economy jobs program Tuesday
A few weeks ago, we published the thoughts of a few global advocates and activists on how they find