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It was Windows that crashed (and couldn't reboot) caused by the Crowdstrike application causing a kernel panic.
Operative words there caused by surely? I mean, CrowdStrike have all but admitted fault, if not liability, haven't they?
Would you have legal recourse if you're trying to book a concert ticket that's in demand and the concert sells out in 5 minutes. Windows crashes. Your ISP goes down. I don't think you'd have a legal case. Same if you're trying to sell some shares. What if the power goes out. Same deal.
As I said, you know IT better than me, but in this case, from what I understand, CrowdStrike pushed out an update that was faulty and caused the Windows thing and massive disruption to businesses, which no doubt cost 'em heaps. My analogy would be that Toyota dealer gives your car a '000km service and gave it back to you with faulty brakes due to a mechanic making a mistake. You have an accident because of the faulty brakes. Sue the service provider for the cost to you.