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The fallout from the 'most serious IT outage the world has ever seen' is continuing to hit Britain tonight - with planes and trains grounded, the NHS disrupted, shops closed, football teams unable to sell tickets and banking platforms knocked offline.

The devastating technical fault caused Windows computers to suddenly shut down, prompting departure boards to immediately turn off at airports including Heathrow, Gatwick and Edinburgh on the busiest day for British airports since Covid.

Stemming from a faulty update pushed out by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, the problem has been identified and is gradually being fixed - but with knock-on effects for travellers and patients as systems come back online.

Follow MailOnline's live coverage below.  

This live blog has now closed.

23:48

Now Global IT outage threatens to hit our paychecks! Global Payroll Association warns they have been contacted by numerous clients unable to access software

The global IT meltdown has threatened to affect people's paychecks due to employers and banks relying on CrowdStrike.

The Texas-based company admitted responsibility for the outage which has seen GP appointments halted, flights cancelled or delayed and online chaos created for banking programs.

The Global Payroll Association (GPA) warned yesterday that millions of workers around the world 'risk going without their wages' due to the worldwide outage.

22:01

Airline passengers around the world prepare to spend the night in airports

With CrowdStrikes claiming it could be 'some time' before the Microsoft outage is resolved and with over 5,000 flights globally already impacted - passengers across the world are now preparing to spend the night sleeping in their terminals.

21:47

Pictured: Weary passengers at Heathrow Airport as the IT outage continues to delay flights

21:16

CrowdStrike's CEO releases statement addressing the Microsoft outage

CrowdStrike's CEO George Kurtz has issued a statement on the company's website addressing today's outage.

Mr Kurtz wrote: 'Valued Customers and Partners.

'I want to sincerely apologize directly to all of you for today’s outage. All of CrowdStrike understands the gravity and impact of the situation. We quickly identified the issue and deployed a fix, allowing us to focus diligently on restoring customer systems as our highest priority.

'The outage was caused by a defect found in a Falcon content update for Windows hosts. Mac and Linux hosts are not impacted. This was not a security or cyberattack.

'We are working closely with impacted customers and partners to ensure that all systems are restored, so you can deliver the services your customers rely on.

'CrowdStrike is operating normally, and this issue does not affect our Falcon platform systems. There is no impact to any protection if the Falcon sensor is installed. Falcon Complete and Falcon OverWatch services are not disrupted.

'We will provide continuous updates through our Support Portal and via the CrowdStrike blog. Please continue to visit these sites for the latest updates.

'We have mobilized all of CrowdStrike to help you and your teams. If you have questions or need additional support, please reach out to your CrowdStrike representative or Technical Support.

'We know that adversaries and bad actors will try to exploit events like this. I encourage everyone to remain vigilant and ensure that you’re engaging with official CrowdStrike representatives. Our blog and technical support will continue to be the official channels for the latest updates.

'Nothing is more important to me than the trust and confidence that our customers and partners have put into CrowdStrike. As we resolve this incident, you have my commitment to provide full transparency on how this occurred and steps we’re taking to prevent anything like this from happening again.'

20:52

CrowdStrike's CEO withdraws from a sports car race this weekend

CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz has withdrawn his car from a professional sports car race in America this weekend.

Kurtz, who co-founded the company in 2011 and owns a five per cent stake, also drives for the CrowdStrike Racing team in the Fanatec GT Challenge America series in a high-speed Mercedes-Benz AMG GT racing car.

However, Sportscar365 reports the team has withdrawn from an event at Virginia International Raceway this weekend. A stewards' note confirmed the car had been withdrawn 'at the request of the competitor'.

20:39

Number of flights cancelled worldwide due to CrowdStrike gaffe tops 5,000

More than 5,000 flights were cancelled across the world because of the CrowdStrike error, according to an aviation analytics firm.

Figures from Cirium, reported by the BBC, suggest 5,078 flights - 4.6% of those scheduled - were canned because of the errors. Of those, 167 departures and 171 arrivals in the UK were affected.

20:16

CrowdStrike boss sees his £3.4bn fortune plummet by £100k and £9bn wiped off his firm as his system sends the world into Microsoft outage crisis

The grievous error wiped £9billion from CrowdStrike's value and $320million (£247m) from Mr Kurtz's personal wealth; he owns a five per cent stake in the firm and the dip represents a loss of a tenth of his $3.4billion net worth.

19:33

New York City billboards go blank

Images show billboards in New York go blank as the global IT outage continues.

Tom Harris, president of the Times Square Alliance, said a 'handful' of billboards in the area remained offline earlier on Friday, AP reported.

19:02

Pictured: Passengers queue in airports across the world

18:50

Pictured: People wait at Gatwick airport as flights cancelled

18:29

Most flights should 'operate as usual' tomorrow, says Gatwick

Gatwick's IT systems are now operating as usual and the airport expects the 'majority' of flights to go ahead as normal tomorrow, the BBC reported.

A Gatwick spokesperon said: 'Some delays and cancellations will however continue this evening and over the weekend. We strongly advise passengers to check with their airline for the latest updates.'

17:59

Two thirds of Brits have ditched cash for card or phone payments

Most Brits have stopped using cash in favour of cards and phone – meaning millions will be struggling to pay for goods and services today amid the IT meltdown.

Two-thirds (66 per cent) of adults use debit or credit cards for all their everyday purchases, according to research by Lopay, Britain’s lowest-cost and best-rated card reader service.

17:48

More than 4,000 flights cancelled worldwide today

As many as 4,295 flights worldwide have been cancelled so far today, according to aviation data from Cirium.

While the IT outage caused some of the cancellations, the figure also includes flights which were cancelled for other reasons.

16:55

London Ambulance Service suffers 'huge increases' in calls to 999 services

Chief Executive of London Ambulance Service Daniel Elkeles said: 'Following the global IT outage that has impacted some NHS services across the capital, our call handlers and ambulance crews are incredibly busy with huge increases in the number of calls to both our 999 and 111 services.

'In fact, by 2pm today, we had received more than 3,000 999 calls and 3,000 calls to our 111 services – this is a third higher than we would usually receive in a full 24 hour period.

'Our teams are always here to help if you need us and we encourage anyone who needs our services to continue to contact us. We are working very hard to make sure we are getting to patients as quickly as possible, but please be aware that our response times today may be impacted by this global issue.

'We ask that people use our 999 services wisely and contact their pharmacy or visit NHS 111 online where possible. Londoners can continue to help us by only calling 999 in a serious medical emergency.'

16:53

Disruption eases for some UK airports but issues remain

UK airports have been suffering from disruption today with IT outages causing flights to be delayed or cancelled across the globe.

  • Heathrow said flights are departing and arriving smoothly
  • Standed said some airline check-in systems and retailed payments were affected but these are now working again. Longer than usual queues
  • Manchester Airport said check-in and boarding continues to be impacted for some airlines
  • Gatwick said the issue was continuing to impact some airlines' check-in systems and security
16:31

Wes Streeting: Continue to access NHS services as normal

Health Secretary Wes Streeting said his advice to patients today is to 'continue to access services as normal'.

However, he said if you find your pharmacist or GP looking 'more stressed' than normal 'just bear with them'.

He told the BBC: 'And let's be honest, on a normal day they're under a lot of pressure,' he says.

In a post on social media earlier Streeting said his department was 'working closely with colleagues across government'.

15:50

18-year-old due to take first flight alone stranded at airport

Katie Turner, 52, was waiting at Gatwick with her daughter Poppy Clements, who turned 18 yesterday and was due to take her first flight alone to see a friend in Rome this morning.

Katie said: 'We've moved about 20-feet forward in four hours and that's only because more and more people have joined the queue, so we've all had to move up slightly.

'This is my daughter's first solo flight and I'm waiting with her.

Poppy, who lives in Crystal Palace, South London, added: 'I really hope I get to fly out today. I've called my friend in Rome to warn her....and she said: "Be prepared to be there all day!"

'I really hope not. I checked in last night, but I need to drop in my luggage, but the system is down and nobody can do anything.

'We have to grin and bear it at the moment.'

15:45

WATCH: GP asks patients to 'bear with us' as the NHS is hit by IT meltdown

Resize

15:42

'WFH will make recovery from IT meltdown harder'

Computer experts have warned that employees working from home will make any tech recovery today harder.

Patrick Burgess, an advisor on information security for the British Computer Society, said: 'Coming back from it is very much dependent on how each company has prepared for an incident like this and what their disaster recovery and business continuity positions look like.

'How many staff do you have? How easy is it for you to roll back?

'One of the things we did in the pandemic is get rid of offices a lot. In the old days your IT team could run down from the office upstairs. Getting people to physical computers when they're offline can be quite difficult.'

15:24

Crowdstrike customers remain 'fully protected'

CrowdStrike's chief executive has said the cybersecurity firm's customers 'remain fully protected', emphasising it has experienced an outage not a cyber-security incident.

He posted an update on X this afternoon:

15:12

Number of cancelled flights soars to 3,300

The number of flights cancelled worldwide due to the IT outage has now risen to 3,340.

This is around three per cent of all scheduled services, according to aviation data company Cirium.

15:03

READ MORE: Full list of shops, banks, travel companies and events affected by the global IT meltdown

15:01

Microsoft advises turning your computer off and on again... 15 times

Microsoft has suggested customers try rebooting their computers 15 times as that might resolve the issue.

The company said they have received some reports of successful recoveries using this method.

14:52

Increased demand on 999 services

South Central Ambulance Service said it was experiencing increased demand on its 999 and NHS 111 services due to the global IT issues.

In a post on X, it said: 'As usual, our 999 team will be prioritising patients in a serious or life-threatening condition.

'Patients not requiring such an immediate response may have to wait longer than usual to be seen by our ambulance team.

'If you have an urgent, not emergency, medical need rather than call 999 please make use of other local services, such as urgent treatment centres which remain open across our region until late this evening.'

14:39

Graphic shows list of major companies and retailers affected

14:14

Maps showing area worst hit by the Crowdstrike crisis in the UK, the US and Australia

14:09

What is CrowdStrike, why is it experiencing issues, and could a cyberattack be responsible?

The rogue app that brought down computers across the world is ironically aimed at protecting PCs from hackers.

Crowdstrike is a security service designed to stop internet breaches for the globe's biggest companies, but is now responsible for perhaps the biggest IT outage we have ever seen.

Computer analysts believe a badly-written bit of code in the update triggered the catastrophe and wrecked computer networks worldwide.

Crowdstrike has confirmed a faulty update was responsible for sparking the chaos.

Dr Mark Gregory, associate professor at RMIT University's School of Engineering, said he believed an update to one of CrowdStrike's software products, called Falcon, is 'bricking' computers running Windows, making them inoperable.

Cyber expert Troy Hunt told Seven News the catastrophic crisis was not affecting all Microsoft Windows computers, but many of them.

14:08

Two thousand people waiting to check-in at Stansted Airport

A passenger hit by travel chaos says he was forced to wait in a three-hour queue with more than 2,000 people at Stansted Airport.

Rafa de Miguel arrived four hours before his Ryanair flight to Madrid when he 'sensed the mood change' as passengers found out about the Microsoft outage.

The 56-year-old says staff were forced to write out boarding passes and luggage tags in pen because the IT system was down.

It's been chaos and I was queuing for three and a half hours. We know that the system went down. There were a lot of people waiting there.
I would say there were about 2,000-3,000 people waiting to check in. There are mothers with babies and children in all this confusion. When I arrived, I sensed a change in mood where people didn't know what was going on.
People were checking their phones and I checked the BBC and saw the news that Microsoft was down and thought it was going to be chaos and it was. Self-check-in wasn't working and it wasn't letting people check in their baggage.
It's a perfect example of us being too reliant on the internet. It goes down and the world goes crazy.

14:05

Government services 'largely unaffected now'

Officials will hold another meeting on Friday to discuss the IT outage, Pat McFadden said, as he indicated government services are 'largely unaffected now'.

The Cabinet minister told the BBC:

Cobra officials met this morning. I've been kept updated about the situation throughout the day, the Prime Minister has been kept informed. We will have a further meeting later today to make sure we are across the situation.
But as far as government services goes, the online services that government provides, these are largely unaffected now, and it's important that's the case because a lot of vulnerable people depend on these services."

Asked about the need for back-up systems after GP surgeries were hit, Mr McFadden said: 'What this incident shows is just how dependent we are on IT systems. And when something like this happens, how fast and how widespread the effects are...

'It's really important, because we're so reliant on these systems, that the fix is put in place as soon as possible.'

14:03

Ryanair's electronic check-in systems back up and running

It is being reported that Ryanair's check-in systems are back up and running at Edinburgh airport.

After the airline urged passenger with cancelled flights to go home, to ease the pressure of having hundreds of people in the airport.

13:59

Passengers miss flights over inability to check-in baggage at airport

Nicky Walters, 53, from Wimbledon, South London, had been waiting four hours - only to be told she had missed her flight.

She had been booked aboard the 9.40am Vueling flight to Barcelona.

Nicky fumed: 'The flight was put back to 11am and the last message I had was that the flight was boarding - who is on it though?

'I've been waiting to check luggage in, but we've been told the scanners are down and so we've just been sitting here for the last four hours.

'There's been a distinct lack of information from Vueling. I know it's not their fault, but it would be nice to be kept in the loop as much as possible.

'I'm only going to Barcelona for the weekend - at the moment it seems that most of my time will be spent in Gatwick!'

13:51

READ: PM faces national crisis as Cobra meets to tackle chaos caused by catastrophic global IT outage

13:42

Number of people affected by IT issues falling

Website Downdetector, which tracks complaints coming in about tech issues with major companies, is staring to show the numbers falling once again.

As seen in the image below the spikes highlight when the situation was at it's worst earlier this morning, however many of them now appear to be dropping.

13:31

London taxi drivers unable to take card payments

It appears that London Taxi drivers are the latest business impacted by the global IT outage.

Speaking to the BBC taxi driver, Tommy Johnson, said he hasn't been able to log on to his IT system all day, adding that around 95 per cent of his payments are usually with card.

He's been lucky with many customers having cash, but adds: 'I have had to turn a few people away'.

Another taxi man Tony Vieira called it a 'disasterous day' after he had to get his customer to only pay cash.

13:28

Jetstar cancels all flights for rest of day

Jetstar at Brisbane airport has made the decision to cancel all its flights for the remainer of the day.

Hundreds of passengers have been left disappointed by the decision which happened just before 9pm local time.

It is understood the decision was made due to the airlines inability to check people in.

13:20

'We moved 20ft forward in four hours'

Katie Turner, 52, was waiting patiently in line with daughter Poppy Clements, who turned 18 yesterday and was due to take her first flight alone to see a friend in Rome this morning.

Katie said: 'We've moved about 20-feet forward in four hours and that's only because more and more people have joined the queue, so we've all had to move up slightly.

'This is my daughter's first solo flight and I'm waiting with her.

'The airport staff have been great, but they are in the dark as much as we all are, nobody knows what's going on, nobody knows if the flight is still going ahead and if so, how much of a delay is there?

'It's incredibly dull waiting so long and I feel for families with young children because the boredom really gets to you. It's lucky that kids these days have iPhones and iPads to keep themselves occupied.'

13:18

Scottish Government Resilience Room activated

The Scottish Government Resilience Room has been activated to assess the impact of the IT outage across the country.

A spokesperson said: 'In response to worldwide IT issues, the Scottish Government Resilience Room (Sgorr) has been activated to asses any potential impacts across Scotland.'

The statement added: 'We are aware of impacts at Edinburgh Airport and would urge those travelling today to check with their operator.

'Impact is being experienced by a limited number of UK rail operators but at the moment ScotRail and the Caledonian Sleeper service is unaffected.'

13:16

Ryanair begs passengers with cancelled flights to leave airport

Ryanair urged passengers whose flights have been cancelled to leave the airport.

The airline said in a statement:

Unfortunately, we've been forced to cancel a small number of flights today due to this global third-party IT outage.
Affected passengers have been notified and are advised to log into their myRyanair account once systems are back online to see their options.
A full list of cancellations is available at http://ryanair.com. If your flight has been cancelled, we kindly request that you leave the airport as the IT outage means we cannot currently assist passengers at the airport.
We sincerely apologise for any inconvenience caused by this global third-party IT outage, and we are working hard to minimise disruption and keep passengers informed.
13:08

Passengers being checked in manually on flights

Passengers at Gatwick Airport are being checked in manually on specific flights to ease long queues that have emerged because of a global IT outage.

The global glitch has led to long queues for the check-in desks at the airport, with some passengers standing still for several hours.

In response, airport staff have started to check passengers onto specific flights to ease the queues in order of intended departure time.

One member of staff could be heard shouting 'Budapest' amid a large crowd of people urging the relevant passengers to come forward.

13:07

Crowdstrike shares plummet

Shares in the company that caused the global IT outage have seen their shares plummet over night.

Crowdstrike, who has accepted responsibility for the issue, saw their shares drop 20 per cent.

12:54

Hospital declares critical incident as cancer appointments postponed

Royal Surrey Hospital has declared a critical incident becasue of IT issues from the global outage.

According to their website the issues have affected Varian, the IT system the hospital uses to deliver radiotherapy treatments.

Earlier the hospital was unable to deliver scheduled radiotherapy treatments, but this afternoon’s appointments will take place as scheduled, the trust said in an update.

Appointments into next week could still be affected due to remaining disruption to the system, the statement added.

12:47

Edinburgh Airport stops all inbound flights

Edinburgh airport has been forced to halt all inbound flights, due to the high number of aircrafts already there.

Eurocontrol, which manages air traffic control, said that Edinburgh Airport 'is not available for arrivals due to IT issues'.

The problem appears to be a knock on effect, caused after US airlines Delta dn United imposed a 'global ground stop'.

United Airlines said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter:

As we work to fully restore these systems, some flights are resuming. Many customers travelling today may experience delays.

12:39

Passenger fume that 'communication has been non-existent' from airlines

Holly Watson, 36, was due to fly to Malaga on a Vueling flight at 9.40am.

But she said: 'We've been rooted to this spot since twenty past seven this morning and have got nowhere. That's four hours. We've had very little in the way of updates from Vueling.

'In fact, communication has been non-existent. The airport staff have no idea what's going on because it's a worldwide technical issue and nobody yet knows how to resolve it.

'I get that they don't know what's going on - but it would be nice to at least see or speak to someone for some kind of reassurance.

The queue for passengers awaiting Vueling flights at Gatwick's South Terminal snakes all the way from the rail station to a branch of WH Smith's - a distance of about 200-metres.

12:33

Football clubs asks fans not to try and buy tickets

Brentford FC has asked fans not to try and buy tickets, as they are experiencing 'an issue with third-party software'.

Writing on X the club told fans to not join the queue online, as they are 'unable to process any ticket sales at this time.'

12:29

Couple furious after spending $15,000 on Europe holiday - to get stuck in airport

Tina and Luke Griffin from Tennessee in the U.S had been hoping to fly to Barcelona at 10.55am this morning as part of a 15,000 dollar, two-and-half week trip to Europe.

Tina, 47, a TV and radio host, said: 'We don't know what to do, do we stay and hope we can fly to Spain at some point or get back on the Gatwick Express and head back to London?

'We have four children with us and it's not very fun standing around an airport for hours on end not knowing if we are even going to get to travel today.

'We flew into London from Nashville four days ago and we're hoping to visit Barcelona and Portugal before heading back to London for few more days and flying home in a fortnight's time.

'But I don't want to waste a day like this. Right now, people are cool and calm but give it a few more hours and tempers are going to be frayed and we don't really want to be around for that.

'We've not really moved since joining the queue four hours ago- it's only gone down slightly when people have decided to leave and go home.'

12:25

More than 100 flights cancelled at British airports

According to aviation analysts Cirium, 52 flights have been cancelled departing from UK airports and a further 51 inbound flights have also been axed.

This comes as the latest global figure say nearly 1400 flights have been cancelled due to the IT issue, out of the 110,000 commercial flights scheduled for today.

12:14

NHS Blood and Transplant urges people to come to appointments

NHS Blood and Transplant urged people to keep their blood donor appointments, saying it had been contacted by people wondering if they were going ahead.

NHS Blood and Transplant are calling on donors to book and keep appointments to donate blood to boost NHS resilience at this time.
There remains a particularly urgent need for O negative blood. Blood donation systems are not affected and we currently have a high number of appointments available at our donor centres in major towns and cities.

12:06

Passengers prepare to wait all evening for their flights

Elaine Bevan, a retired nurse from Southampton, has been waiting in line at Gatwick Airport for over two hours to check in for her 2pm flight to Orlando, Florida.

The 70-year-old booked the two-week trip with her family in November 2023 and said she will wait as long as necessary because the holiday has been booked for such a 'long time'.

Ms Bevan said: 'We're all getting a bit tired. It took us ages to find the queue in the first place.'

Asked if she was prepared to wait until the evening for the flight, she said: 'I think we have to. It's been booked for a long time - since November last year.'

She asked: 'In the world where IT is king, why does it not perform as it should?'

Marcello Jones is flying to Los Angeles where he studies law.

The 25-year-old from Cornwall said he 'hopes' to get his money back, but added: 'We'll see what happens. There is not much I can do. I just want to get on the plane.'

Most passengers at Gatwick remained in good spirits thanks to bottles of water being handed out and sufficient air conditioning within the airport.

11:56

'We are deeply sorry' says CrowdStrike CEO as he warns systems 'could take some time' to recover

Ceo of Crowdstrike George Kurtz has said he is 'deeply sorry' for the issues caused by the global IT outage.

Speaking to NBC he said that although the issue had now been remediated it 'could take some time' for the systems to fully recover.

Mr Kurtz said this process won't happen automatically but they are working to ensure recovery happens as quickly as possible.

11:45

Employees unable to access payroll information

Melanie Pizzey, CEO and Founder of the Global Payroll Association said:

'We’ve been contacted by numerous clients already today who have been unable to access their payroll software due to the Microsoft outage and others who have been urged to log out with immediate effect.
'Depending on the length of this outage, it could have very serious implications for businesses across the nation, particularly those who process payroll on a weekly basis.'
11:43

UK government business not affected, says No 10

Government business has not been affected by the global IT outage, No 10 has said after holding a Cobra meeting.

The meeting was held at official-level - rather than ministers - earlier this morning.

A No 10 spokeswoman told reporters: 'We recognise the impact this is having on services and the Government is working closely with the respective sectors and industries on this issue, which is affecting services not only across the UK but also globally.

'Officials have met in the Cobra unit on this this morning and of course are updating ministers regularly on this issue.'

11:34

Mercedes fixing issues ahead of Hungarian Grand Prix practice

Merecedes is working to ensure the global IT outage has no impact on today's practice sessions at the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Error messages were seen on their pitwall earlier with the team now looking to fix the issues.

Crowdstrike is an official partner of the Mercedes F1 team with the company involved in their trackside operations.

The first practice at the Hungaroring begins at 12.30pm today.

11:23

NHS Trust declares critical incident with cancer treatment affected

Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust has declared a critical incident amid the major IT outage.

A statement on its website said: 'Royal Surrey has declared a critical incident due to external IT issues which are widely affecting services including ours. This issue has affected Varian, the IT system we use to deliver radiotherapy treatments."
'The trust said it had contacted patients who were due to have radiotherapy this morning to reschedule appointments.
'We hope these systems will be up and running soon and will directly contact patients who are due to have radiotherapy appointments if we are unable to deliver their treatments. Please attend your appointments unless you have heard otherwise.'

11:20

'Biggest IT fail ever' - Elon Musk

Tesla and X boss Elon Musk has called the Microsoft outage the 'biggest IT fail ever' in a post on social media.

Musk was replying to an article on the issue that is affecting services worldwide.

11:12

Waitrose card payments 'mainly back to normal'

Waitrose is now accepting contactless payments 'largely as normal' following issues this morning.

The supermarket confirmed that chip and pin and cash payments have remained largely unaffected - with contactless payments being the only method impacted.

John Lewis stores have not been affected by the IT issue.

11:05

IT outage at GP practices a 'serious concern'

Professor Kamila Hawthorne, chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs, said any form of IT outage 'is a serious concern'.

'Our members are telling us that today's outage is causing considerable disruption to GP practice bookings and IT systems - practices using EMIS IT systems appear to be particularly affected.

'Any form of disruption to our digital systems is a serious concern for GPs as it directly impacts on the care we can give to our patients. Outages like this affect our access to important clinical information about our patients, as well as our ability to book tests, make referrals, and inform the most appropriate treatment plan.'

11:01

School closes due to 'severe issues'

Castleford Academy near Leeds has been forced to remain closed to pupils today, after it said it was experiencing 'severe issues' with its computer systems.

In a post on X the school said:

Due to a severe issue with the academy computer servers, the academy will be closed to all pupils today.
We apologise for the short notice.

This follows reports that a parent communication app, Schoolcomms, which serves thousands of schools is also reporting 'issues'.

10:55

Nearly 1,400 flight cancellations worldwide

The number of worldwide flight cancellations due to the global IT outage has now risen to almost 1,400.

So far, 1390 have been cancelled, according to aviation analytics company Cirium.

Here is a breakdown per country from the statistics provided so far:

  • US: 512
  • Germany: 92
  • India: 56
  • Italy: 45
  • Canada: 21
10:47

Australian PM activates crisis protocols

Anthony Albanese the Australian Prime Minister has activated the country's emergency crisis protocols in the wake of the global outage.

The National Coordination Mechanism, which was first used in the pandemic, has been 'activated' to try and support the country through the IT failures.

10:41

PICTURED: International airports continue to face significant delays

Travellers wait in Terminal 1 for check-in at Hamburg Airport

Travellers wait at check-in counters at Berlin Airport

Chaos at Majorca Airport due to worldwide computer systems error

Hong Kong Express Airways passengers queue at counters

10:40

Most trains still running despite IT issues

Industry body the Rail Delivery Group has said 'most trains are still running" despite the effect of the IT outage.

A spokesperson said: 'Train operators have been affected by ongoing global IT issues which may result in some short notice service changes and cancellations, also impacting real-time information screens and services at stations.

'We are sorry for any customers experiencing disruption to their journeys today; staff are working hard to resolve the issues as soon as possible.

'Most trains are still running across the country and rail staff will be able to provide the latest information to customers in person.'

10:36

Passengers complain biggest problem is 'lack of information'

Lance and Penny Spraggons said they have been waiting in a queue for over an hour.

The couple are flying to Paris to mark their 55th wedding anniversary by going on a cruise starting on the River Seine.

The queue to the check-in desk is a five minute walk away, Mr Spraggons said, and they haven't moved since they arrived in line.

The 77-year-old remained cheerful however, saying: 'We're with a travel company, so one would hope that if there is an issue (we would be covered).'

Penny Spraggons, 78, said: 'It's a long way to stand when you're this age.'

Mr Spraggons intervened: 'The biggest problem is the lack of information. We got here and we didn't know what was happening until we saw the queues.'

10:34

COBRA response begins as ministers get involved

Whitehall crisis officials are co-ordinating the response to the major IT outage hitting airlines, train companies and banks.

The Cobra system that deals with matters of national emergency or major disruption has been fired up, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden said.

A No 10 spokeswoman later told reporters: 'Officials have met in the Cobra unit on this this morning and of course are updating ministers regularly on this issue.'

Asked why Sir Keir Starmer did not chair Cobra - which deals with matters of national emergency or major disruption, the spokeswoman said the Prime Minister had been meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and his Cabinet on Friday morning, and that she was not aware of plans for a gathering of the committee with ministers present.

The spokeswoman also said she was not aware of any Whitehall departments being hit by the outage.

10:28

WATCH: Airports across the globe descend into chaos

Resize

10:25

American Airlines 'safely re-established'

American Airlines has said it has 'safely re-established' services after experiencing technical issues this morning.

It was forced to issue a 'global ground stop' on all of their flights this morning, and have since 'apologised to customers for the incovenience.'

10:20

Scale of disruption likened to 'Millennium Bug'

Technology experts have said the disruption is at the scale expected from Y2K or the 'Millennium Bug', a computer programming shortcut that was forecast to cause chaos as the year changed from 1999 to 2000 but never materialised.

'I don’t think it’s too early to call it: this will be the largest IT outage in history,' said Troy Hunt, a prominent security consultant, in a social media post.

'This is basically what we were all worried about with Y2K, except it’s actually happened this time.'

10:19

CBBC is back on air

CBBC is back up and running after being down for hours following IT issues.

Along with Sky News they were the only major broadcasters to be affected by the persisting issues.

Sky is also back online however it still appears unable to use graphics.

10:16

Ticket machines down at train stations

South Western Railway's customer facing systems have been affected by the global IT outage.

Some of its ticket machines and retail systems are currently down but customers are still able to buy tickets online or on the app.

Information boards were also displaying blank screens at some London stations this morning.

10:11

Zurich airport closes

Zurich airport has been forced to close after flights were unable to take off due to the global tech outage.

It has said that it is not operating any services to the US, as other flight operations remain partially restricted with delays and canceled flights.

Flights on route to Zurich that are already in the air are still allowed to land.

10:07

Belfast airport back in the 'dark ages'

One passenger at Belfast airport told Sky news it was like they had gone back to the 'dark ages'.

After the airport was forced to use a pen and paper to offer passengers details on their flights.

10:04

Queues at Gatwick hit 50m long

Queues at Gatwick Airport have reached 50m long as staff start handing out bottled water to stranded passengers.

The airport has gone into meltdown following a global IT outage which is affecting the check in desks.

Heathrow has also been impacted with the airport reporting delays to flights this morning.

10:01

'Not a security incident or cyberattack', claims Crowdstrike

In a statement on social media, CrowdStrike said the global IT outage was 'not a security incident or cyberattack'.

Adding that the problem had been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed.

09:58

Breaking:Crowdstrike says 'fix deployed'

IT security firm Crowdstrike says it has identified the issue, isolated it and deployed a fix.

Crowdstrike's CEO, George Kurtz, issued this statement.

09:58

WATCH: Chaos on TV as major broadcasters hit by Microsoft outage

Resize

09:55

Breaking:Global IT issues caused by 'defect' in 'content update', as Crowdstrike issues statement

Crowdstrike has issued a statement blaming a 'content update' for the global outage.

Crowdstrike is actively working with customers impacted by a defect found in a single content update for Windows hosts.
Mac and Linux hosts are not impacted. This is not a security incident or cyberattack.
The issue has been identified, isolated and a fix has been deployed."We refer customers to the support portal for the latest updates and will continue to provide complete and continuous updates on our website.
We further recommend organisations ensure they’re communicating with Crowdstrike representatives through official channels.
Our team is fully mobilised to ensure the security and stability of Crowdstrike customers.
09:52

Breaking:Microsoft blames 'third-party software'

In a statement, Microsoft said a resolution for Windows devices was 'forthcoming'.

We are aware of an issue affecting Windows devices due to an update from a third party software platform. We anticipate a resolution is forthcoming.
09:52

Sainsbury's, Iceland, Asda and Lidl unaffected

Payments at Sainsbury's, Iceland, Asda and Lidl are all currently unaffected by the global IT outage, the supermarkets have confirmed.

09:50

Visa claims to be 'unaffected' by global outage

Visa, the banking giant, has claimed to be unaffected by the global tech outage affecting millions of people.

A spokesperson said:

There is no indication of any impact on Visa’s ability to process payments from this issue.
Our systems are operating normally.
We are aware of reports of people being unable to make payments and are working with our financial institution clients to understand any impact on their services to cardholders and merchants.

09:44

Waitrose 'cash only' as card machines go down

Supermarket chain Waitrose has gone 'cash only' in some stores as its card machines have gone down.

A checkout worker at Kings Cross Station told customers: 'It is cash only at the moment. The card machines are not working.'

A queue of around 30 people was seen snaking around the supermarket in the London station.

09:43

Australian PM says 'no impact' to critical infrastructure

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has said there is 'no impact' to 'critical infrastructure' in the country.

In a message of calm on X he said he understood the 'concern' of his citizens.

I understand Australians are concerned about the outage that is unfolding globally and affecting a wide range of services.
There is no impact to critical infrastructure, government services or Triple-0 services at this stage.

09:40

More than 1000 flights cancelled globally

According to aviation analytics firm, Cirium, has estimated that so far today 1078 flights have been cancelled around the world.

09:34

Passengers in Majorca face major delays

09:32

Breaking:'Majority of GP practices' affected, says NHS England

NHS England has issued an alert claiming that the 'majorirty of GP practices' in England have been affected by the global outage.

However, it adds that there is currently no known impact on 999 or emergency services.

09:24

'Biggest day for flights leaving the UK since 2019'

Travel journalist Simon Calder told Sky News: 'This is the biggest day for flights leaving the UK since 2019 - we needed everything to go right. Unfortunately, it hasn't.'

09:22

Dutch airline says flight handling 'impossible'

Dutch airline KLM has said that its flight handling is currently 'impossible'.

Although they are working to get things up and running again, it has been forced to 'largely' suspend operations.

09:21

Manchester United's ticket release delayed

Manchester United's ticket release has been delayed until midday due to the global IT outage.

The football club's website is also currently unavailable and will remain so until the issue is resolved.

09:14

Banks in Germany and South Africa experiencing 'difficulties'

Banks in Germany and South Africa have experienced difficulties this morning, according to reports.

German banks are facing disruptions amid reports of global outages, a spokesperson for the Deutsche Kreditwirtschaft finanical industry association said.

South Africa's Capitec Bank's has seen services restored after experiencing significant disruptions across all its banking channels due to the global downtime incident, it said.

09:07

Port of Dover warns of queues

People travelling to the border crossing in Folkstone today have been told to expect delays.

In a post on X it admitted that its services had also been affected by the global crash and longer check-in times were likely.

09:05

Prescriptions face delays, pharmacy association warns

The National Pharmacy Association (NPA) confirmed the IT outage is disrupting community pharmacies.

A spokesperson said:

We're aware that due to global IT outages that services in community pharmacies, including the accessing of prescriptions from GPs and medicine deliveries, are disrupted today.
We urge patients to be patient whilst visiting their pharmacy.
We're urgently raising this issue with the NHS England.
09:03

Cyber security expert says people must 'remain calm'

Cyber security expert Dan Card, from BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT, said people 'should remain calm' while businesses respond to the global IT outage.

It looks like a bug to a regular security update, rather than any form of 'mega cyber attack', but this is still causing worldwide challenges and is likely to require a large number of people to take manual remedial steps.
Companies should make sure their IT teams are well supported as it could be a difficult and highly stressful weekend for them as they help customers.
People often forget the people that are running around fixing things.'
08:59

Passengers stranded at Gatwick Airport

Passengers have been stranded at the check-in desks at Gatwick Airport as its IT systems have been affected by the global IT outage.

One traveller described the scene at the travel hub as 'bedlam' with staff now handing out water to those stranded.

Dean Seddon started queuing at 6am to check in for a trip with his social media training company to Miami, Florida, ahead of their scheduled departure at 10am with Norse Atlantic Airways.

'There are just people everywhere, there must be 400 people in this queue for the check in desk I'm at... it's just bedlam," the 42-year-old from Plymouth said.

'It's one of those things where you kind of know we're not going to fly, but you don't want to leave because you don't know.

'(Staff are) doing the best they can but they don't actually know when it's going to be fixed, so it is frustrating, but you kind of feel for the staff as well.'

08:59

Lib Dems call for Cobra meeting

The Liberal Democrats have urged the Government to convene a meeting of the Cobra emergency committee to co-ordinate an urgent response to the major IT outage.

The party's Cabinet Office spokesperson Christine Jardine said:

The Government must call an urgent Cobra meeting to address the chaos being caused by these IT outages across the country.
The public needs to be reassured that the disruption to their travel or their desperately needed GP appointments will be minimised.
Getting critical infrastructure up and running again must be priority number one. The National Cyber Security Centre should also be working with small businesses and other organisations to help them deal with the outage.
This once again lays bare the need to improve our digital infrastructure and truly modernise our economy in order to prevent the incidents from happening again.

08:57

Indian airport 'hand-write' boarding passes

Passengers in India have been given hand-written boarding passes as they struggle with the ongoing IT problems.

While at Dehli airport's terminal 3, a man stands next to a white board updating the departure times manually for passengers.

08:56

Delays at Heathrow Airport

Heathrow Airport has been affected by the global IT outage with flights being delayed.

A spokesperson said: 'Flights are operational but we are experiencing delays.

'We are implementing contingency plans to minimise any impact on journeys.

'Passengers are advised to check with their airline for the latest flight information.'

08:52

Paris Olympics affected but has 'contingency plans'

The organising committee for the Paris Olympics says its IT operations have also been impacted.

However, with just a week to go until the lavish boat procession down the River Seine, officials have said they have a 'contingency plan in place', according to Reuters news agency.

08:48

CBBC TV channel down

CBBC, the BBC's TV channel for children, has been down since this morning.

A message that reads 'Sorry! Something's gone wrong' is popping up instead of the usual content.

The broadcaster has said CBBC is its only channel affected with CBeebies and BBC One still on air.

08:47

German hospitals cancel non-emergency operations

Two hospitals in the cities of Luebeck and Kiel have been forced to cancel elective operations scheduled for today.

However, they claimed that patient care and emergency services will go ahead as normal.

08:44

US airline blames Crowdstrike

American Airlines, which is the world's biggest by passenger numbers, was forced to ground all its flight earlier today due to IT problems.

It has now blamed the US firm Crowdstrike as the source of the issue saying it is because of 'technical issues with Crowdstrike that is impacting multiple carriers'.

The airline says its working with the IT security firm to fix the problem as quickly as possible.

08:41

Poland's largest container 'struggling'

Poland’s largest container terminal, the Baltic Hub, has issued a statement to say it is 'stuggling' following the latest IT issues.

It has been forced to ask companies to not send containers to the port, which usually handles up to 2.9 million containers per year.

Pleased be advised that we are struggling at the Baltic Hub with a global Microsoft operating system outage that is hampering terminal operations.
08:37

GP practice tell patients to wait until Monday for routine concerns

A GP practice in Oxfordshire has asked patients with 'routine concerns' to wait until Monday amid an IT outage.

Writing on X, Windrush Medical Practice in Witney, said: 'There is a nationwide outage of our booking system EMIS.

'We're continuing as normal for urgent enquiries but ask for routine concerns to wait until Monday.

'Please continue to submit your queries through Engage Consult. Thank you.'

08:36

National Rail experiencing 'widespread' issues

Train service information website National Rail Enquiries said there are 'widespread IT issues across the entire network'.

Among the operators affected are Avanti West Coast, Great Western Railway, Southern and Thameslink.

National Rail Enquiries told passengers:

There are currently widespread IT issues across the entire network.
IT teams are actively investigating to determine the root cause of the problem.
As a result, some train operators are unable to access driver diagrams at certain locations, leading to potential short-notice train cancellations.
Additionally, other key systems, including real-time customer information platforms, are also affected.
08:35

Luton airport claims some of its airlines affected

Luton Airport said that a global IT outage is affecting some airlines and operations are continuing with manual systems.

On X, formerly Twitter, the airport posted:

We are aware of an ongoing global IT issue that is impacting check-in and boarding procedures for some airlines.
We have additional staff on hand to support and operations are continuing with manual systems.
Passengers are advised to check with their airlines for flight updates.
08:34

WATCH: Outage causes lengthy queues at Gatwick Airport

Resize

08:33

Former Home Office security advisor blames system for putting 'all eggs in one basket'

Owen Sayers, IT security advisor and former IT security consultant to the Home Office and Ministry of Justice has said:

This is what happens when the infrastructure that’s too big to fail, fails.
Today’s global outage of Microsoft is rapidly sending shockwaves across all sectors and shows once again - if proof were needed - that putting all our eggs into one huge world-spanning basket might not have been a good idea.
The irony of this is that the failure might not - this time - even be Microsoft’s fault, but is related to a Crowdstrike security update.
That a protective measure gone wrong has brought such instant chaos to so many countries and industry sectors might surprise many people, but the reality is that public Cloud infrastructure is both complex and surprisingly fragile.
The concern for UK citizens is that over the past 10 years the UK Government have moved core services directly on to these platforms. Police, 999 services, health and the fabric of our society all sit on these Cloud, that were never designed for that use - but the purveyors of which were all too happy to allow to onboard.
The length of the outage and exact details of its cause and how to rectify it is still unclear - but one thing is for sure . We’re exposed like we’ve never been before and this is a heads up we’d be wise to pay attention to.
08:29

Barcodes not working at Gatwick airport

Barcodes on boarding passes at Gatwick airport are reportedly not working, leading attendate to have to check the tickets manually.

However, a BBC reporter has said that airport security is operating as normal.

08:26

Football clubs ticketing platform malfunctions

Even football clubs have been affected, with  telling fans that its ticketing platform was malfunctioning.

08:22

New Zealand parliament reporting problems

New Zealand parliament has reported that their computer network is having problems.

08:20

Met Police claims they are 'not affected'

The Metropolitan Police says it has not been affected by this morning's IT issues and currently all systems are operating normally.

08:19

Supermarket checkouts go down across Australia

Customers at Australian supermarkets have been unable to buy their groceries at the checkouts as IT issues persist.

08:17

Issues affecting Bristol Water

Bristol Water said it is experiencing company wide IT issues but the billing department remains operating.

On X, formerly Twitter, the company posted:

Please be aware we are experiencing company wide IT Issues - we are still able to take emergency calls at this time.
At the moment the billing department remain operating as usual.
Sorry for any inconvenience, we are working on getting back to normal as soon as possible.
08:15

Australian airports plunged into chaos

08:12

Airports in Japan, India and Germany also affected

Japan's Narita airport, around 60km (37miles) from Tokyo, says airlines JetStar, Jeju Air, Qantas, HK Express and Spring Japan are having issues with their systems.

And in India, Delhi airport says some services have been temporarily impacted.

While in Berlin the airport posted on X that it is experiencing delays to check-ins due to a 'technical fault'.

08:10

Breaking:Sky News back on air

Sky News has just come back on air, after being offline for three hours.

Sky Sports Presenter Jacquie Beltrao has posted earlier on X saying: 'We're obviously not on air - we're trying @SkyNews Breakfast.'

08:08

Technology experts explains why this has happened

08:06

Gail's bakery unable to take card payments

In the UK, bakery and coffee shop chain Gail's is reporting problems.

A sign outside the window of its Swain's Lane shop in London says it is unable to take in-store payments.

Users on social media have also reported being unable to make payments at other Gail's outlets.

08:03

GP surgeries hit by the outages

GP surgeries across the UK have been hit by the outages, as they claim the issue will will 'have a big effect'.

The Wilmslow Health Centre in Cheshire wrote on X:

All practices in the UK using the NHS commissioned GP computer system EMIS are currently without access to their IT systems.
This is beyond the control of GP surgeries. Please bear with us until we have our IT systems back online.

Central Lakes Medical Group in Ambleside wrote on X:

We're impacted by the IT outage.
This will have a big effect on us, so apologies in advance for the inconvenience caused, and delays on the phone.

Another post by Pocklington Group Practice in the East Riding of Yorkshire said:

Due to ongoing Windows issues affecting IT worldwide, the practice is currently unable to function as normal.
This may result in appointments needing to be cancelled and rearranged. Updates will follow when available."

While Solihull Healthcare Partnership in the West Midlands said there is a 'national issue' with EMIS Web, the clinical computer system.

Unfortunately there is a national issue with EMIS Web - our clinical computer system.
This will affect our ability to book/consult with patients this morning.
We will update patients when we can. We apologise for the disruption.

NHS England has been contacted for comment.

08:00

London Stock Exchange affected

The London Stock Exchange is reportedly als experiencing technical glitches, after Microsoft reported an outage across its online services.

It said on its website this morning:

RNS news service is currently experiencing a 3rd party global technical issue, preventing news from being published on www.londonstockexchange.com.
Technical teams are working to restore the service. Other services across the Group, including London Stock Exchange, continue to operate as normal.
07:56

UK trains 'experiencing problems' due to 'IT issues'

Southern, Thameslink, Gatwick Express and Great Northern - all four of Govia Thameslink Railway's brands - said they were experiencing problems but were 'actively investigating' the issue.

It continued: 'We are unable to access driver diagrams at certain locations, leading to potential short-notice cancellations, particularly on the Thameslink and Great Northern networks.

'Additionally, other key systems, including our real-time customer information platforms, are also affected.

'We will provide additional updates when we can. In the meantime, please regularly check your journey before you travel.'

07:48

US airlines issue global grounding of all flights

United, Delta and American Airlines have issued a 'global ground stop' on all of their flights.

Flights that are currently airborne will continue, but no further flights will take off for now.

07:46

Sky News apologies for disruption

Sky News has apologised for the disruption to its live broadcast on Friday morning, saying: We are working hard to restore all services.'

A Sky News spokesperson said in a statement:

Sky News has not been able to broadcast live TV this morning, we apologise for the interruption.
All the news is still available online, on the Sky News app, website, and across our social media accounts.
We are working hard to restore all services.

07:44

Passenger disruption at Gatwick airport

Passengers arriving at Gatwick airport have been faced with mammoth queues as IT system go down.

07:41

Edinburgh airport plunged into chaos

Edinburgh Airport's automated boarding scanners have been the latest tech to go down following the global Microsoft issue.

One witness has reported that the Airport was checking boarding passes manually.

on top of this departure boards in the main terminal building appeared to freeze, showing out-of-date information about gate numbers and take off times - meaning some passengers have missed their flights.

Edinburgh airport spokesperson said passenger should expect longer waiting times.

An IT system outage means wait times are longer than usual at the airport.
This outage is affecting many other businesses, including airports.
Work is ongoing to resolve this and our teams are on hand to assist where we can. Passengers are thanked for their patience.

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