Delta Air said it is pursuing legal claims against CrowdStrike and Microsoft after the global outage sparked by a faulty software update disrupted the travel plans of 1.3 million Delta passengers and cost the airline more than $500 million.
"There is no basis to suggest that Delta was in any way responsible for the faulty software that crashed systems around the world, including Delta’s," wrote lawyer David Boies, who is representing Delta, to CrowdStrike.
He also rejected CrowdStrike's contention that the company's liability is capped at “single-digit millions."
Last month's tech glitch affected global airlines, banks and retail and supermarket industries around the world.

Dubai Customs measures provide more than AED79 million for private sector
UAE's non-oil foreign trade approaches AED 2 trillion mark in six months
IMF praises UAE economy's resilience, proactive readiness
Apple unseats Nvidia to become world's most valuable company
Indian court orders Maruti to replace car in first E20 fuel damage ruling
