Fake Crowdstrike 'Employee' Takes Blame of Microsoft Global Outage, Here's How He Did it
Fake Crowdstrike 'Employee' Takes Blame of Microsoft Global Outage, Here's How He Did it
Man poses as fake Crowdstrike employee after Microsoft outage shakes world, here's how he did it.

The entire world was thrown into chaos yesterday after a massive Microsoft outage. Offices, airlines, and almost every digital service ground to a halt, plunging us into a technological nightmare on Friday, July 19. Computer screens flashed the dreaded blue screen of death, and banks, airlines, and broadcasters were suddenly offline.

Amidst this turmoil, one man, Vincent Flibustier, claimed responsibility and became an unexpected internet sensation. Posing as a new employee at CrowdStrike, the cybersecurity firm linked to the outage, he tweeted a cheeky message: “First day at CrowdStrike, pushed a little update and taking the afternoon off.” He accompanied it with a hilariously doctored photo of himself outside the CrowdStrike office. A few hours later, he tweeted again: “Fired. Totally unfair.”

Also Read: ‘International Bluescreen Day’: Microsoft Outage Opens ‘Windows’ to Memes

Flibustier even updated his X (formerly Twitter) bio to match his parody. It read: “Former CrowdStrike employee, fired for an unfair reason, only changed 1 line of code to optimize. Looking for a job as Sysadmin.” He also appealed to X boss Elon Musk for a job. In a deadpan video confession, he recounted his supposed mishap.

“It was my very first day on the job as a new system admin and I was very eager and excited. Let’s say I actually made a small update to a line of code, optimised an update slightly a little bit, and maybe I shouldn’t have. I got fired so I was called in,” he explains in the video.

“They called me back today, telling me that I really need to come back. It really wasn’t even to congratulate me. Now, I’m just waiting for my termination documentation. They told me that you should never put an update into production without testing, especially not on a Friday, and I said, ‘Well, it’s not Friday; it was Thursday, and today is Friday’,” he added.

Vincent Flibustier is actually a writer for the Belgian parody news site Nordpresse. In another video, he revealed that his photo outside the CrowdStrike office was AI-generated and explained the psychology behind his viral success. He noted that people crave narratives that confirm their biases.

Explaining why his joke resonated so well, he said, “No culprit named yet, I bring it on a platter, people like to have a culprit. The culprit seems completely stupid, he is proud of his stupidity, and he takes his afternoon off on the first day of work. This falls right into a huge buzz in which people absolutely need to have new information, and a fake is by nature new, you won’t read it anywhere else.”

He also warned against taking things at face value online and the spread of misinformation, especially with the rise of generative AI. His videos, too, were translated by AI.

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