Good morning from Skift. It’s Friday, August 9, 2024, and now here’s what you need to know about the business of travel today.
06.08.2024 - 18:29 / thepointsguy.com / Ed Bastian / Delta Ceo / David Boies
In the latest salvo of a brewing public relations war, Microsoft joined CrowdStrike in pushing back against recent criticism from Delta Air Lines, claiming that the carrier rejected technical assistance in the aftermath of an outage that eventually led it to cancel more than 5,000 flights.
The tech firm accused Delta of promoting an inaccurate narrative surrounding what caused the nearly weeklong meltdown in late July, in a letter sent Tuesday by a lawyer representing Microsoft, Mark Cheffo of Dechert LLP. The letter, a copy of which was seen by TPG, was sent to David Boies, a well-known attorney whom Delta said it was retaining to pursue damages from CrowdStrike and Microsoft.
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"Delta's public comments are incomplete, false, misleading, and damaging to Microsoft and its reputation," the letter said. "The truth is very different from the false picture you and Delta have sought to paint."
CrowdStrike sent a similar communication to Delta on Sunday.
Delta CEO Ed Bastian said on CNBC last week that the July 19 outage and its fallout had cost the airline $500 million and that it would seek damages from CrowdStrike and Microsoft. CrowdStrike provides security software for Microsoft's Windows operating system, which runs many Delta technologies. A faulty CrowdStrike software update crashed thousands of Microsoft-based networks and systems after it was accidentally set live.
In Tuesday's letter, Microsoft, through the lawyer, said that the Washington-based company offered technical assistance to Delta each day starting July 19, when the outage began, through July 23, as Delta began to get more of a handle on its operation, but that Delta rejected each offer.
The letter cited a specific communication on July 22 in which a Delta employee told a Microsoft worker that the situation was "all good" and declined assistance, and said that Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella emailed Bastian on July 24 to offer help, but received no answer.
Related: How to get money back if you were stranded on Delta Air Lines
Microsoft also claimed that the systems that caused Delta's extended operational meltdown were not reliant on Windows.
"In fact, it is rapidly becoming apparent that Delta likely refused Microsoft's help because the IT system it was most having trouble restoring — its crew-tracking and scheduling system — was being serviced by other technology providers, such as IBM, because it runs on those providers' systems, and not Microsoft Windows or Azure," the letter said.
Instead, Microsoft accused Delta of failing to ensure its systems were adequately designed to cope with interruptions.
"Our preliminary review suggests that Delta, unlike its
Good morning from Skift. It’s Friday, August 9, 2024, and now here’s what you need to know about the business of travel today.
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Good morning from Skift. It’s Tuesday, August 6, and now here’s what you need to know about the business of travel today.
CrowdStrike is striking back.
CrowdStrike said Delta did not accept its offer of onsite help during the carrier’s meltdown that led to thousands of flight cancellations and delays.