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New York CNN —CrowdStrike fired back at Delta after the airline’s CEO lashed out at the cybersecurity firm for computer problems that he said cost Delta $500 million. CrowdStrike claimed Delta would have to explain its own IT shortcomings in any litigation, and that it ignored CrowdStrike’s offers of assistance. But last week, Bastian claimed CrowdStrike was nowhere to be found during the meltdown. Free consulting advice to help us,” said the Delta CEO in an interview on CNBC. It said Delta would have to explain why other airlines restored operations faster and why it turned down CrowdStrike’s onsite assistance.
Persons: New York CNN — CrowdStrike, CrowdStrike, CrowdStrike’s, ” CrowdStrike, George Kurtz, Ed Bastian, , Michael Carlinsky, , Bastian, , you’ve, ” Bastian, David Boies, CNN’s Chris Isidore Organizations: New, New York CNN, Delta, CNBC, CNN, Microsoft Locations: New York, Delta, CrowdStrike
Travelers wait in line, as a flight board shows delays, on the check-in floor of the Delta Air Lines terminal at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) on July 23, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. CrowdStrike on Sunday said Delta Air Lines had rejected onsite help during last month's massive outage that sparked thousands of flight cancellations. Delta CEO Ed Bastian told CNBC's "Squawk Box" last week that the mass cancellations following the outage, which occurred at one of the busiest times of the year, cost the company about $500 million, including customer compensation. In response, Michael Carlinsky, CrowdStrike lawyer and co-managing partner at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan wrote to Delta's lawyer David Boies on Sunday that Delta's litigation threats "contributed to a misleading narrative that CrowdStrike is responsible for Delta's IT decisions and response to the outage." He said CrowdStrike's CEO George Kurtz reached out to Bastian to "offer onsite assistance, but received no response."
Persons: CrowdStrike, Ed Bastian, CNBC's, Bastian, Boies Schiller, Michael Carlinsky, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart, Sullivan, David Boies, George Kurtz Organizations: Delta Air Lines, Los Angeles International Airport, Microsoft Locations: Los Angeles , California
Travelers wait to board their delayed flight at the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on July 23, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia. CrowdStrike 's legal troubles from last month's massive global computer outage deepened on Monday, as the cybersecurity company was sued by air travelers whose flights were delayed or canceled. CrowdStrike said in a statement: "We believe this case lacks merit and we will vigorously defend the company." 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.
Persons: CrowdStrike Organizations: Hartsfield, Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Southwest Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Austin, U.S . Department of Transportation, CrowdStrike Inc, Western District of Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Austin , Texas, Atlanta, Rio et, Western District, Western District of Texas
High temperatures scorch China, spiking power demand
  + stars: | 2024-08-05 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
In the east and northwest of China, temperatures as high as 43.9 degree Celsius (111.02 Fahrenheit) have scorched Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Shanghai, Anhui, Xinjiang in recent days, state broadcaster CCTV said. China Meteorological Administration said some localities in Xinjiang's Turpan Basin, southern Anhui, and central and western Zhejiang, temperatures could rise above 40C. The observatory of Zhejiang's capital Hangzhou recorded a 41.9C historical high on Saturday, with 40-42C temperatures forecast till Monday. Jiangsu's observatory issued a red warning for heat on Sunday after high temperatures which had persisted for more than a week further intensified. The national weather forecaster on Monday cautioned of potential fire hazards caused by excessive power consumption and excessive electrical loads.
Organizations: CCTV, China Meteorological Administration, Grid Locations: Nanjing, China, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Shanghai, Anhui, Xinjiang, Turpan, Hangzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou
The legal saber rattling between the cybersecurity company CrowdStrike and Delta Air Lines over the global I.T. outage last month just ratcheted up a notch. The blame for Delta’s woes lies with the airline alone, the lawyers wrote. The letter was in response to Delta’s hiring of David Boies, a prominent litigator, and saying that it would seek damages over the outage, which it said cost it $500 million. Shares in both companies have plunged since the July 19 outage, with CrowdStrike down more than 35 percent.
Persons: Quinn Emanuel Urquhart, Sullivan, David Boies, Pete Buttigieg —, , we’re Organizations: Delta Air Lines, The New York Times, NPR, Transportation Locations: Delta
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailLightning Round: Boeing has long-term staying powder, says Jim Cramer'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer weighs in on stock including: Boeing, Freeport-McMoRan, Delta, Nvidia, and Philip Morris.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Philip Morris Organizations: Boeing, Nvidia Locations: Freeport, McMoRan
CrowdStrike denies Delta's claims that the firm is responsible for thousands of flight disruptions. CrowdStrike wrote in a letter that it "strongly rejects" the airline's allegations. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy .
Persons: CrowdStrike, Delta's, Ed Bastian, , Michael Carlinsky, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart, Sullivan Organizations: Service, Delta Air Lines, Business Locations: Delta, Texas
A renewed spotlight on protecting access to birth control may not help women who are already struggling to find affordable contraception in some states with the strictest abortion laws. Few community clinics have the amount of money needed to cover birth control each month, McCollum said. But over-the-counter birth control pills haven’t reached many women in rural areas. Because of the Texas policy change an estimated one-quarter of family planning clinics in the state closed by 2013. “If someone does not have insurance, we can pay for their visit and their birth control method,” McCollum said.
Persons: Robin Marty, ” Marty, Court’s Dobbs, Roe, Wade, Kate McCollum, McCollum, , Adek Berry, haven’t, , Marty, Jitoria Hunter, It’s, ” McCollum, ” Hunter, Micaela Sanchez, it’s, Sanchez, ” Sanchez, Meta Anderson, ” Anderson Organizations: Healthcare, Medicaid, Getty, and Drug Administration, Target, Walmart, Walgreens, CVS, Center for Healthcare, Mississippi Delta Locations: Tuscaloosa , Alabama, Alabama, Southern, Mississippi, Texas, Dallas . Federal, AFP, ” In Mississippi, Tennessee, Alabama , Mississippi, Louisiana , Arkansas, Oklahoma, In Texas, In Mississippi, Alabama , Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Louise , Mississippi, Georgia
Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian on Friday offered employees two free travel passes to thank staff members who were caught in massive disruptions last month sparked by a botched CrowdStrike software update that stranded thousands of customers and crew. Delta had more trouble than competitors in recovering from the outages that took thousands of Windows machines offline. The disruption “has been a humbling moment for our company,” Bastian said in his note on Friday, which was seen by CNBC. Its executives frequently point out Delta’s work to win over customers willing to pay more to fly the carrier, marketing itself as a premium airline. Bastian said Delta plans to pursue legal action against CrowdStrike and Microsoft “to recover our losses caused by the outage” and that it has hired law firm Boies Schiller Flexner.
Persons: Ed Bastian, Bastian, ” Bastian, , Delta, Boies Schiller, , CrowdStrike didn’t Organizations: Delta Air, Delta, CNBC, CrowdStrike, Microsoft
Finance, health care and other regulated industries should consider their specific needs and tailor their defenses with military-grade components, he added. The implementation of military-grade cybersecurity is not without challenges. In 2024, regulated industries have witnessed a significant increase in both the number and cost of data breaches. Frederic Rivain, chief technology officer of Dashlane, holds a contrarian view on the need for military-grade defenses. "Multifactor authentication is important, and you must have it, but you still need to have multiple layers," Two Bears said.
Persons: CrowdStrike, Javad Abed, Abed, shouldn't, Cole, Didi, National Intelligence Avril Haines, Gen, Gary Orenstein, Orenstein, doesn't, Frederic Rivain, Rivain Organizations: Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, Delta Air Lines, Finance, IBM, Ponemon Institute, Bears, Amazon, Data, Verizon, National Intelligence, Employees Locations: ThinkGard, U.S, China, America
Global Jets ETF , whose largest holdings are Southwest Airlines , United Airlines , American Airlines and Delta Air , is off 7.5% just since the end of June. GE Aerospace GE Aerospace is a pure play on the rise of global air travel, according to John Belton, portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds. Just about all 18 analysts polled by LSEG consider GE Aerospace a buy, with five rating it a strong buy. Central to the investment thesis for GE Aerospace is its market leadership. "The air travel industry is a growth industry," Galluccio said.
Persons: Richard Branson, John Belton, Belton, Nicholas Galluccio, Galluccio, Morningstar, that's, Tony Bancroft, Bancroft, there's, wanderlust Organizations: Virgin Group, U.S . Global Jets ETF, Southwest Airlines, United Airlines, American Airlines, Delta Air, Transportation, Boeing, Airbus, Gabelli, International Air Transport Association, AAR Corp, Teton Advisors, Westwood, Equity, GE Aerospace GE Aerospace, Gabelli Funds, New York Stock Exchange, General Electric, GE Aerospace, LSEG, GE, Airlines, Morningstar, Growth, Max, Federal Aviation Administration, Aerospace & Defense ETF, Heico Corporation, Triumph, TransDigm Locations: U.S, Eastern Europe
Can Gouda’s Cheesemakers Stall a Sinking Future?
  + stars: | 2024-08-01 | by ( Nina Siegal | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
On a recent morning in Gouda, a small city in the Netherlands, hundreds of wheels of yellow cheese lay out in rows on the cobblestones of the town square, a backdrop to the city’s weekly cheese market, which dates to the Middle Ages. Ad van Kluijve, a farmer dressed in blue work shirt, red bandanna, blue cap and wooden clogs, haggled with a buyer over the price of his latest batch of “jong belegen,” famous for its mild caramel flavor. In the rest of the world, it is one of many cheeses named after the city in which it is traded. The haggling is largely a performance for tourists as the actual price negotiations take place elsewhere. The cheese industry in the region is very real, though, accounting for about 60 percent of the national cheese production, with an export value of $1.7 billion annually, according to ZuivelNL, which represents the Dutch dairy sector.
Persons: van, jong Locations: Gouda, Netherlands
A light rain fell at the Zurich airport one Sunday morning in January 2023 as Sarah Kate Ellis made her way from a seat in Delta’s most exclusive cabin to a waiting Mercedes. It was there to chauffeur her to the Swiss Alps, where she and her colleagues would stay at the Tivoli Lodge, a seven-bedroom chalet that cost nearly half a million dollars to rent for the week. Ms. Ellis, who was en route to the World Economic Forum in Davos, doesn’t run a Wall Street bank or a high-flying tech start-up. She is the chief executive of the nonprofit organization GLAAD, one of the country’s leading L.G.B.T.Q. The trip was part of a pattern of lavish spending at GLAAD, much of it by Ms. Ellis, that may have violated the organization’s own policies as well as Internal Revenue Service rules.
Persons: Sarah Kate Ellis, Mercedes, Ellis, doesn’t Organizations: Economic, GLAAD, The New York Times, Revenue Service Locations: Zurich, Delta’s, Swiss, Davos
"We believe liquid cooling solution for NVDA's GB200 server rack system in data centers can create a US$4.8bn [total addressable market] by 2027," it said. By enhancing thermal design power and more, such liquid cooling systems save between 10% and 15% on capital expenditure, according to Morgan Stanley. "Heat flow knowhow, precision requirements and time-to-market delivery are key winning factors in this space," said Morgan Stanley analysts. It said it likes Taiwanese firm Delta as it believes its liquid cooling solution will add an additional $280 million in AI cooling revenue in 2025. "Our supply chain checks suggest AVC is the reference design for cold plate for NVIDIA's GB200 server rack liquid cooling system," it added.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Morgan, PUE, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Stock, Companies, Schneider Electric, Delta Electronics, New, Nvidia Locations: Delta, New Taiwan
Delta CEO said the IT outage cost $500 million in losses from revenue and passenger compensation. The tech issues, linked to a flawed CrowdStrike update, led to over 5,000 flight cancellations. CEO Ed Bastian said in an interview with CNBC that the carrier has "no choice" but to seek damages. AdvertisementDelta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said the mass IT outage, which resulted in days of delays and cancellations, cost the airline $500 million. Delta canceled several thousand flights over several days after an IT meltdown caused by a flawed update issued by Texas-based cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike.
Persons: Ed Bastian, , CrowdStrike, Bastian Organizations: Delta, CNBC, Service, Air, Business Locations: Texas
Ninety companies are using the AI, which can detect violations from uploaded photos and videos. This article is part of "CXO AI Playbook" — straight talk from business leaders on how they're testing and using AI. But Goetsch said Soter's AI platform could identify hazards, risks, and violations within about 30 seconds. Soter said about 90 companies were using SoterGenius, including Delta Air Lines, Ramp Health, Boston Children's Hospital, and the insurance brokerage Marsh. For example, Goetsch said one company using SoterGenius recently purchased electric forklifts and installed charging stations.
Persons: , We've, Soter, Mike Goetsch, Goetsch, SoterGenius, it's, What's Organizations: Service, Ikea, DHL, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Federal Aviation Administration, Delta Air Lines, Health, Boston Children's Hospital Locations: London
New York CNN —The CEO of Delta Air Lines lashed out at cyber security firm CrowdStrike and software provider Microsoft for the computer problems that resulted in a five-day service meltdown he said cost the airline $500 million. Free consulting advice to help us,” said Ed Bastian in an interview Wednesday on CNBC, when asked about how much compensation CrowdStrike and Microsoft have offered the company. And he blasted CrowdStrike for the flawed software update at Delta and hundreds of other companies around the globe that caused widespread computer outages on July 19. “If you’re going to have priority access to the Delta ecosystem in terms of technology, you’ve got to test this stuff,” Bastian said. Delta is a sponsor and the official airline of the US Olympic team, and CNBC’s NBC parent has the US broadcast rights to the games.
Persons: , Ed Bastian, CrowdStrike, you’ve, ” Bastian, David Boies, , Bastian Organizations: New, New York CNN, Delta Air Lines, Microsoft, CNBC, Delta, CNN, US Olympic, NBC Locations: New York, Paris
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDelta Air Lines CEO on CrowdStrike outage: Cost us half a billion dollars in five daysDelta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the fallout from the CrowdStrike-Microsoft outage earlier this month, lessons learned from the incident, what the proper compensation should be, state of the airline industry, and more.
Persons: Ed Bastian Organizations: Air Lines, Delta Air, Microsoft
Trump is sparking steep losses in areas of the market he's targeted, a group of researchers said. Researchers pointed to Trump's many "tantrums" against certain companies and sectors, which sparked sell-offs. AdvertisementThe market is in the midst of another "Trump Dump," a phenomenon where stocks see deep losses when the presidential hopeful targets them, according a group of researchers. Advertisement"As bad as turbulence has been, a second Trump term promises to be even more perilous for the stock market," they added, pointing to the potential consequences of Trump's economic policies. Other economists have criticized Trump's economic agenda.
Persons: Trump, , Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Whitney Tilson, Steven Tian —, Davidson, Powell, Donald Trump, Harris, Joseph Stiglitz Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Taiwan Semiconductor, Nasdaq, Clean Energy, Harley, Delta Airlines, Biden, Trump Locations: Taiwan, Trump's
Read previewThe last thing airline passengers want or expect is for a pilot to have a medical emergency during a flight. Medical emergencies are planned forKent Davis spent over 30 years as a pilot for commercial airlines and private clients. He said he made an emergency landing in Ottawa, while the flight attendants on board cared for the pilot. In August, a LATAM Airlines pilot on a three-person crew had a medical emergency during a flight from Miami, Florida, to Santiago, Chile. He received medical attention after the plane made an emergency landing in Panama, but was later declared dead.
Persons: , Kent Davis, Mark Stephens, it's, Davis, Stephens Organizations: Service, Business, US, Trans Global Aviation Solutions, China News Service, Airbus, LATAM Airlines, NBC Locations: London, Lisbon, Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa, Miami , Florida, Santiago, Chile, Panama, Piper
Ed Bastian, chief executive officer of Delta Air Lines Inc., during an interview in New York, US, on Monday, Nov. 7, 2022. Bastian said that he sees 'strong demand' for flights carrying into 2023. Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said the massive IT outage earlier this month that stranded thousands of customers will cost it $500 million. The airline canceled more than 4,000 flights in the wake of the outage, which was caused by a botched CrowdStrike software update and took thousands of Microsoft systems around the world offline. Other airlines recovered faster, and Delta's cascading disruptions and customer response sparked an investigation by the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Persons: Ed Bastian, Bastian, CNBC's Organizations: Delta Air Lines Inc, Delta Air, Microsoft, U.S . Department of Transportation Locations: New York, Paris
CrowdStrike is sued by shareholders over huge software outage
  + stars: | 2024-07-31 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
CrowdStrike has been sued by shareholders who said the cybersecurity company defrauded them by concealing how its inadequate software testing could cause the July 19 global outage that crashed more than 8 million computers. The complaint cites statements including from a March 5 conference call where Kurtz characterized CrowdStrike's software as "validated, tested and certified." Delta Chief Executive Ed Bastian told CNBC on Wednesday that the outage cost his airline $500 million, including lost revenue and compensation and hotels for stranded fliers. CrowdStrike shares closed on Wednesday down $1.69 at $231.96. The case is Plymouth County Retirement Association v CrowdStrike Inc et al, U.S. District Court, Western District of Texas, No.
Persons: George Kurtz, CrowdStrike, David Boies, Kurtz, " Kurtz, Burt Podbere, Ed Bastian Organizations: Crowdstrike Holdings Inc, Bloomberg Technology, RSA Conference, U.S . Congress, Delta Air Line, Retirement Association of, Delta, CNBC, Retirement, Western District of Locations: San Francisco , California, Austin , Texas, Austin, Plymouth, Retirement Association of Plymouth , Massachusetts, U.S, Western District, Western District of Texas
Featured Offer for Military Members USAA Preferred Cash Rewards Credit Card Apply now lock icon An icon in the shape of lock. Good to Excellent Pros Check mark icon A check mark. Good to Excellent Pros Check mark icon A check mark. Good to Excellent Pros Check mark icon A check mark. Military members will have their credit vetted just as anyone who applies for a credit card.
Persons: USAA, Cash, Uber, Wiley, Julie Mehretu, Peacock, Uber Cash, Hilton, that's, Marriott, Regis, Chase Travel ℠, Chase, Hyatt, , you’ve, Miles you've, Miles you’ve, Miles, There’s, Cardholders, You'll, Sapphire, Instacart, you'll, you've Organizations: Business, Hilton, Military, Auto, American Express, Marriott, Saks, Entertainment, Disney, ESPN, The New York Times, Street, American, Walmart, TSA, Global, Saks Fifth, Hilton Honors, Marriott Bonvoy, Ritz, Carlton, TSA PreCheck, Cell, New Hampshire Insurance Company, AIG Company, Delta SkyMiles ®, Delta, Delta Sky Clubs, ®, SkyMiles ®, Delta Sky Club, Delta Sky, U.S, Delta SkyMiles, Chase, Chase Travel, Sapphire, Chase Sapphire, FDIC, United, United ®, United Club, Southwest ®, Rapid, Southwest, Rapid Rewards, Hyatt, Hyatt Credit, Resorts, Hotels, InterContinental ®, Crowne Plaza, Discover, Discover's, Discover . Discover, Navy Federal Credit, Navy, Credit, Amazon Prime, Amazon, Navy Federal Credit Union, Card, Citi, Bank, Centurion, Honors, Hilton Diamond, Aspire, Delta Reserve American Express, American Express Card, Delta Reserve, Chase Sapphire Reserve, United Airlines, Hertz, Hyatt Credit Card, IHG, Credit Card, Rewards, Navy Federal Flagship, . Navy Locations: Hulu, Caribbean, American, delta.com, Canada, Hyatt, Chevron, St, Regis
Learn moreThe Lost Lands Festival is known for two things: boosted bass and dinosaurs. Here's what fans can expect and how to find tickets to Lost Lands Festival 2024. Lost Lands Festival 2024 scheduleThe Lost Lands Festival only offers three-day passes, with no single-day original tickets available. How to buy tickets for Lost Lands Festival 2024Original tickets for Lost Lands Festival 2024 have sold out. How much are Lost Lands Festival tickets?
Persons: Jessica Audiffred, NERO, Ray Volpe, Rusko, Alix Perez, Alleycti, Atliens, Benda, Blaap, Dion Timmer, Dj Snake, Fresch, Gladde, Faith, Marauda, Noizu, Sullivan King, Vieze Asbak, Wilkinson, Yookie, Abstrakt Sonance, Ash, Chee, Chef Boyarbeatz, Chibs, Codd, Topgun, GG Magree, Jawns, Jeanie, Jkyl, Jon Casey, Jordnmoody, Josh Teed, Justin Hawkes, Lucille Croft, Ozztin, Pauline Herr, Perry Wayne, Pierce, Teddy Killerz, Wiley, Xotix, YVM3 Organizations: Business, Lands, Fidelity, Lost Lands, Sunday, Lost, Focus Locations: Thornville , Ohio, Legend, Columbus , Ohio, Columbus, Ganja, Hairitage, Hol, Automhate, Bainbridge, BBX, Humansion, Lumasi, Subfiltronik, Sully, Wayve
Revenue of $695 million was also higher than the $686 million expected. Adjusted earnings of 5 cents per share topped the loss of 2 cents per share forecasted by analysts polled by FactSet. Additionally, Howmet increased its quarterly dividend to 8 cents per share from 5 cents per share, to be payable Aug. 26. JetBlue — Shares jumped 4% after the airline said adjusted earnings per share was 8 cents for the second quarter. Analysts expected a profit of $2.80 per share on revenue of $1.18 billion, according to StreetAccount.
Persons: Woodward, FactSet, LSEG, Archer, Gamble —, Leidos, StreetAccount, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailai Han, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Fred Imbert, John Melloy Organizations: CNBC, Delta Airlines, Microsoft, FactSet, Inc, , Technology, Merck —, pharma, Semiconductor, Bank of America, Pfizer —, Pfizer, Varonis Systems, Howmet Aerospace, Corning, LSEG, Daniels, Midland, JetBlue —, Revenue, PayPal —, PayPal, Procter, Gamble, U.S . Pentagon Locations: FactSet .
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