Thursday, 1 May 2025

A global technical glitch stops airports, airlines, banks, stock exchanges and television channels

Today, Friday, a series of technical problems hit the services of airlines, banks, airlines, stock exchanges, and television channels around the world, leading to them stopping work. It began with the disruption of cloud computing services from Microsoft.

Sources in the oil and gas sector told Reuters that several major oil and gas trading headquarters in London and Singapore are facing difficulties in carrying out transactions due to the Internet disruption on Friday. Today, Berlin Airport informed passengers of a delay in baggage check-in services.

The London Stock Exchange also announced that trading operations were affected by a technical glitch. Medical officials reported that the health booking system in England had been disrupted and its internet connection had been cut off. The CEO of Sky News Britain, David Rhodes, announced via the

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The London Stock Exchange also announced that trading operations were affected by a technical glitch. Medical officials reported that the health booking system in England had been disrupted and its internet connection had been cut off. The CEO of Sky News Britain, David Rhodes, announced via the

The defect has affected institutions on a very large global scale, as 6 sources in the oil and gas sector confirmed that several main oil and gas trading headquarters in London and Singapore are facing difficulties in carrying out transactions due to the Internet disruption.

Microsoft announced this morning that the defect had been fixed in the central region of the United States after it led to the suspension and cancellation of many flights.

Also, Turkish Airlines announced that it is facing problems in its reservation systems, passenger check-in, and ticket issuance due to a global technical glitch. The Turkish company’s help desk stated in a post on Ex that work is underway to solve the problem.

The Federal Aviation Administration announced that Frontier had been asked to temporarily halt the airline’s departures across the United States. Shortly after 10 p.m. ET.

The airline canceled 131 flights on Thursday and postponed another 223, making up nearly 30% of its total flights, according to data tracking firm FlightAware. The disruption affected the railway ticket sales systems in Belgium.

Also in the Middle East, airports announced flight changes and flight delays due to holidays. The major outage also led to the cessation of work in Australian banks, and with it the medical reservations system used by doctors also witnessed a malfunction.

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