On-Prem

CxO

Microsoft punches back at Delta Air Lines and its legal threats

SatNad himself offered CrowdStrike recovery help, Redmond says, before suggesting airline's IT is in a mess


Microsoft has labelled Delta Air Lines' accusations it's partly to blame for the outages caused by CrowdStrike’s buggy software "false" and "misleading" – and insulted the state of the carrier’s IT infrastructure.

Delta, which has hired a law firm and threatened to sue Microsoft and CrowdStrike over the July 19 meltdown, previously claimed recovering from the BSOD blitz cost it $500 million.

In an August 6 letter to lawyer David Boies who acts for Delta (and it's safe to say is no friend of Microsoft's), Redmond's legal rep Mark Cheffo asserted that Microsoft executives repeatedly offered to help the airline every day between July 19 and July 24.

All of those offers – including an email from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella to Delta CEO Ed Bastian – were ignored, according to Cheffo.

"Microsoft continues to investigate the circumstances surrounding the CrowdStrike incident to understand why other airlines were able to fully restore business operations so much faster than Delta, including American Airlines and United Airlines," he wrote [PDF].

And then the real kicker: "Our preliminary review suggests that Delta, unlike its competitors, apparently has not modernized its IT infrastructure, either for the benefit of its customers or for its pilots and flight attendants." Oof.

Delta, in response to The Register's inquiry, didn't dispute Microsoft's we-tried-to-help claims. But it did push back on the claim its IT is shoddy.

"Delta has a long track record of investing in safe, reliable and elevated service for our customers and employees," a spokesperson wrote in an emailed statement. "Since 2016, Delta has invested billions of dollars in IT capital expenditures, in addition to the billions spent annually in IT operating costs."

Microsoft's letter follows a similar missive CrowdStrike sent to Boies yesterday that also claimed the embattled airline refused its offer of on-site help, and accused Delta of making poor IT decisions that ultimately led to its delayed recovery. ®

Send us news
39 Comments

Under Trump 2.0, Europe's dependence on US clouds back under the spotlight

Technologist Bert Hubert tells The Reg Microsoft Outlook is a huge source of geopolitical risk

Microsoft names alleged credential-snatching 'Azure Abuse Enterprise' operators

Crew helped lowlifes generate X-rated celeb deepfakes using Redmond's OpenAI-powered cloud – claim

Microsoft expands Copilot bug bounty targets, adds payouts for even moderate messes

Said bugs 'can have significant implications' – glad to hear that from Redmond

If you dread a Microsoft Teams invite, just wait until it turns out to be a Russian phish

Roses aren't cheap, violets are dear, now all your access token are belong to Vladimir

Snake Keylogger slithers into Windows, evades detection with AutoIt-compiled payload

Because stealing your credentials, banking info, and IP just wasn’t enough

Microsoft shows off novel quantum chip that can scale to 'a million qubits'. So far: Eight

Not just a matter of time but a matter of Majorana fermions, too

Microsoft's drawback on datacenter investment may signal AI demand concerns

Investment bank claims software giant ditched 'at least' 5 land parcels due to potential 'oversupply'

Ad-supported Microsoft Office bobs to the surface

Only a test at the moment, but a sign of things to come?

Microsoft trims more CPUs from Windows 11 compatibility list

OEMs blowing dust from the processor stock cupboard, beware

Russia's Sandworm caught snarfing credentials, data from American and Brit orgs

'Near-global' initial access campaign active since 2021

Your days of driver sync via Windows Server Update Services are numbered

Microsoft suggests a move to the cloud

Oops, some of our customers' Power Pages-hosted sites were exploited, says Microsoft

Don't think this is SaaS and you can relax: Redmond wants a few of you to check your websites