Key lessons from the time when the digital world stood still

In the past few weeks, we’ve seen two devastating “blue screen of death” IT outages across the globe: from the initial CrowdStrike outage that affected 8.5 million Windows devices to the latest DDoS-related Microsoft crash. While the immediate impacts remain unclear, we can expect both outages to have significant, long-term ramifications.

The immediate crash is already estimated to have cost U.S. Fortune 500 companies up to $5.4 billion in damages, with those in the banking and healthcare sectors expected to be hit the hardest. In addition, the disruption sent countless organizations scrambling to restore their systems and secure their data, creating a chaotic environment ripe for exploitation. The turmoil not only exposed vulnerabilities, but also weakened cybersecurity defenses, leaving enterprises far more susceptible to cybercriminals who could quickly exploit them in times of crisis.