Last Friday, the world was struck by a technological blackout. It woke up to a failed software update that hit millions of devices, and brought to mind a widely acclaimed film.
Leave the World Behind, produced and directed by the inventive Sam Esmail, an American of Egyptian descent, premiered less than a year ago on Netflix and after last week’s one-click tech crisis, it now looks prophetic.
Friday’s problems were broad. Thousands of flights were delayed or cancelled and airports were shut. Train stations and shipping lines were also affected. Medical appointments and even scheduled surgery was postponed. Financial services and banking were hit as the turmoil reached trading platforms and media outlets.
To those who had seen the film, it looked like a case of life following art, at least to an extent. The thriller, starring Julia Roberts and Ethan Hawke alongside Mahershala Ali, Mahala Herald, and Kevin Bacon, shows the impact of an IT failure affecting communication infrastructure, particularly phones, television, radar, stoking fear of a tech-led apocalypse.
Last week’s problems were similar – and began in cloud computing – and there were worrying real-life problems. The disruption reached many countries around the world, including Australia, New Zealand, Japan, India.
In the UK, National Health Service programmes were disrupted for hours as electronic communication with pharmacies was lost, disrupting the normal distribution of medicines to patients.