-
Crystal Palace demoted to UEFA Conference League for multi-club breach
-
Trump's tariff threats and delays: state of play
-
Alcaraz subdues Fritz to reach third successive Wimbledon final
-
She's Electric: Manchester wired as 'Oasis Day' dawns
-
Pogacar pounces to retake Tour de France lead
-
Pogacar pounces to retakes Tour de France lead
-
Archer strikes with third ball on Test return against India
-
Spurs sign Kudus but Gibbs-White move stalls
-
Trump flies to flood-ravaged Texas as scrutiny of response mounts
-
IEA sees anaemic global oil demand growth amid tariff turmoil
-
India's Chopra wants coach Zelezny's big-stage mindset
-
Trump threatens Canada with higher tariff, mulls further global levies
-
Five-star Bumrah strikes for India as England post 387
-
Minister's death spooks Russian elite amid corruption clampdown
-
UNESCO adds Cameroon, Malawi sites to heritage list
-
Irvine Welsh takes aim at 'brain atrophying' tech ahead of new Trainspotting sequel
-
Bumrah's treble strike rocks England before Smith hits back
-
Swiatek and Anisimova battle to be new queen of Wimbledon
-
German backpacker found after 12 days missing in Australian bush
-
The main moments of Paris Couture Week
-
US and China have 'positive' meeting at ASEAN foreign minister talks
-
Defence, joint debt and farmers: EU draws budget battle lines
-
US singer Chris Brown denies more charges in UK assault case
-
Bumrah's treble strike rocks England in third Test
-
Liverpool to honour Diogo Jota in return to action at Preston
-
Hemp guards against England complacency in Euros showdown with Wales
-
Stocks mostly fall as Trump ramps up tariff threats
-
Rubio has 'positive' meeting with China's Wang at ASEAN talks
-
Australia's Aboriginals ask UNESCO to protect ancient carvings site
-
Raudenski: from Homeland Security to Tour de France engine hunter
-
London's Heathrow eyes higher fees for £10bn upgrade
-
Oasis return reminds world of when Manchester captured cultural zeitgeist
-
EU blasts Russia's latest Ukraine attacks, threatens new sanctions
-
Nobel laureate Mohammadi says Iran issuing death threats
-
Kurdish PKK fighters destroy weapons at key ceremony
-
Springbok scrum-half speedster Williams gets chance to impress
-
Cambodia to pass laws allowing for citizenship to be stripped
-
Spurs sign Kudus with Gibbs-White set to follow
-
Kiss's combined Aus-NZ side out to 'light up' Lions tour
-
Markets mixed as traders cautiously eye trade developments
-
Djokovic faces Sinner in Wimbledon blockbuster, Alcaraz takes on Fritz
-
Rubio meets China's Wang on sidelines of ASEAN talks
-
Son of Mexico's 'El Chapo' set to plead guilty in US drugs case
-
Honduran teen deported by US feels like foreigner in native country
-
Lithuania bids to save Baltic seals as ice sheets recede
-
'Impossible to sleep': noise disputes rile fun-loving Spain
-
Danes reluctant to embrace retirement at 70
-
China crackdown on gay erotica stifles rare outlet for LGBTQ expression
-
Veteran O'Connor called up for Wallabies against Lions
-
Trump to visit flood-ravaged Texas amid scrutiny
'Large-scale' IT outage hits companies worldwide
A major outage wrought havoc on global computer systems on Friday, grounding flights in the United States, derailing television broadcasts in the UK and impacting telecommunications in Australia.
Australia's National Cyber Security Coordinator said the "large-scale technical outage" was caused by an issue with a "third-party software platform", adding there was no information as yet to suggest hacker involvement.
Flights were suspended at Berlin Brandenburg airport in Germany due to a "technical problem", a spokeswoman told AFP.
"There are delays to check-in, and flight operations had to be cancelled until 10:00 am (0800 GMT)," the spokeswoman said, adding that she could not say when they would resume.
The UK's biggest rail operator warned of possible train cancellations due to IT issues, while photos posted online showed large queues forming at Sydney Airport in Australia.
"Flights are currently arriving and departing however there may be some delays throughout the evening," a Sydney Airport spokesman said.
- Banks, airports hit -
"We have activated our contingency plans with our airline partners and deployed additional staff to our terminals to assist passengers."
Sky News in the UK said the glitch had ended its morning news broadcasts, while Australian broadcaster ABC similarly reported a major "outage".
Some self-checkout terminals at one of Australia's largest supermarket chains were rendered useless, displaying blue error messages.
New Zealand media said banks and computer systems inside the country's parliament were reporting issues.
Australian telecommunications firm Telstra suggested the outages were caused by "global issues" plaguing software provided by Microsoft and cybersecurity company CrowdStrike.
Microsoft said in a statement it was taking "mitigation actions" in response to service issues.
It was not clear if those were linked to the global outages.
"Our services are still seeing continuous improvements while we continue to take mitigation actions," Microsoft said in a post on social media platform X.
CrowdStrike could not immediately be reached for comment.
- 'Enormous' -
University of Melbourne expert Toby Murray said there were indications the problem was linked to a security tool called Crowdstrike Falcon.
"CrowdStrike is a global cyber security and threat intelligence company," Murray explained.
"Falcon is what is known as an endpoint detection and response platform, which monitors the computers that it is installed on to detect intrusions (i.e. hacks) and respond to them."
University of South Australia cybersecurity researcher Jill Slay said the global impact of the outages was likely to be "enormous".
L.Davis--AMWN