More than 1,400 flights were cancelled worldwide this morning: A global collapse in technological systems has paralyzed airports, broadcasting stations, and transportation systems.

According to local and international media, a global IT collapse occurred this morning, and reports are still being updated. The outage affected almost everything, from airports experiencing problems with passenger check-in and malfunctioning departure and arrival information screens, resulting in the cancellation of more than 1,400 flights worldwide out of approximately 110,000 scheduled for Friday, to airlines suffering from booking issues, with some resorting to handwriting information on whiteboards instead of screens and even writing boarding passes by hand instead of printing them, as happened at an airport in India. Media outlets, such as Sky News in the US, experienced complete outages, as did supermarkets, businesses, government sectors, and ministries around the world, in addition to hospital systems in some countries. Read more after the announcement.

A photo from Belfast Airport in Britain shows the use of a whiteboard instead of electronic screens.
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The British and Australian governments have stated that there is no indication of a cybersecurity threat or that the incident was a confirmed cyberattack. The global IT outage appears to have been triggered by an antivirus update called Crowdstrike, which is causing computers running Microsoft's Windows 10 operating system to crash. The IT disruption is affecting Windows computers worldwide.

The technology giant Microsoft stated a short while ago that the cause of the outage has been fixed.
Which caused the global collapse of information technology, however, there will still be repercussions from the disruption, affecting Office 365 applications and services, according to Reuters.

Turkish Airlines announced the cancellation of 84 flights on Friday due to a major IT outage. The cancellations were made to prevent further disruption to flight operations, and other departing flights will be operated as soon as possible, according to a statement from Turkish Airlines. Read more after the announcement.

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Copenhagen Airport announced delays to some departure flights due to problems at other airports around the world.

وتتوقع SAS “العديد من التأخيرات” نتيجة لتعطل تكنولوجيا المعلومات، حيث صرحت المديرة الصحفية ألكسندرا ليندغرين كاوكجي لقناة TV 2 بالقول: “نحن أقل تأثرا من كثيرين آخرين. لكن بالطبع سيكون هناك الكثير من التأخير. نحن نبقي الركاب المتأثرين على اطلاع”.

Denmark's DSB systems were also affected by the global technological collapse for some time, and just recently announced in an update that their systems are back up and running again.

Hospitals in the Capital Region are not facing critical problems for patients as a result of the global IT collapse, the Capital Region told TV2.

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