Cebu Pacific said it was experiencing “technical issues, reportedly related to technology provider CrowdStrike, which caused a global Microsoft outage.”
“The technical issue requires us to handle affected processes manually, potentially causing delays,” the Gokongwei-led airline said in a statement posted on X, adding that it was working to mitigate disruptions in its operations.
Meanwhile, flag carrier Philippine Airlines said its system was not affected by the outage.
Australia’s National Cyber Security Coordinator attributed the “large-scale technical outage” to a “third-party software platform,” and there was no evidence of hacker involvement.
The UK’s Sky News and Australian broadcaster ABC experienced significant disruptions, and Australian supermarket chains faced issues with self-checkout terminals. New Zealand reported problems with banks and parliamentary computer systems.
Microsoft stated it was taking “mitigation actions” in response to the service issues, and the cybersecurity company CrowdStrike could not be immediately reached for comment.
Experts noted the problem might be linked to CrowdStrike’s Falcon, an endpoint detection and response platform. The global impact of the Microsoft outage was likely to be “enormous,” according to cybersecurity researchers.