CrowdStrike on Sunday said Delta Air Lines had rejected on-site help during last monthâ€
Delta CEO Ed Bastian told CNBCâ€
Bastian told staff on Friday that the airline had informed CrowdStrike and Microsoft that the company was “planning to pursue legal claims� to recover its losses stemming from the outage and that it had hired law firm Boies Schiller Flexner.
In response, Michael Carlinsky, CrowdStrikeâ€
He said CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz reached out to Bastian to “offer onsite assistance, but received no response.�
Delta canceled more than 5,000 flights between the July 19 outage, caused by a botched software update, through July 25, more than its rivals.
CrowdStrike shares have lost more than 36% of their value since the outages affected millions of computers running the companyâ€
“Should Delta pursue this path, Delta will have to explain to the public, its shareholders, and ultimately a jury why CrowdStrike took responsibility for its actions—swiftly, transparently, and constructively—while Delta did not,â€� Carlinskyâ€
He said Delta would have to preserve a series of documents, including those describing its information-technology infrastructure, IT business continuity plans and its handling of outages over the past five years.
CrowdStrikeâ€
“We did everything we could to take care of our customers over that time frame,â€� Bastian said in an interview Wednesday on CNBCâ€
CrowdStrike vowed to release future software updates in stages in a preliminary post-incident report.
On July 30, CrowdStrike shareholders filed a suit against the company in a Texas federal court and sought damages for declines in their investments.
CrowdStrike reports fiscal second-quarter results Aug. 28.
A Microsoft spokesperson did not immediately respond to CNBCâ€