CrowdStrike moved Monday evening to dismiss Delta Air Linesâ€
The agreement between CrowdStrike and Delta includes a clause limiting CrowdStrikeâ€
“As an initial matter, Georgiaâ€
Delta said the July cybersecurity outage cost the company more than $500 million in canceled flights, refunds and passenger accommodations. It is seeking to recoup those costs from CrowdStrike through the suit. But the damage done to Deltaâ€
Delta continues to rely on CrowdStrike services following the outage, likely because it is extremely difficult to change cybersecurity providers in systems as large and complicated as Deltaâ€
Still, CrowdStrike said it moved quickly to try and help Delta — offers the cybersecurity company says were rebuffed. “We are good for now,� one message from a Delta executive cited by CrowdStrike read. The cybersecurity company said its executives were in close contact on the day of the outage.
“Delta repeatedly rebuffed any assistance from CrowdStrike or its partners,� CrowdStrike wrote.
CrowdStrike further argues that Deltaâ€
“Delta was an outlier. Although Delta acknowledges that it took just hours—not days—for Delta employees to� remediate the outage, CrowdStrike wrote in its filing, “cancellations far exceeded the flight disruptions its peer airlines experienced.�
The cybersecurity companyâ€
A Delta spokesperson was not immediately available for comment.