Software

Technical issue briefly grounds American Airlines flights across US

Unspecified "vendor technology" to blame for hour-long stop order


A technical snafu briefly grounded American Airlines flights across the US on Christmas Eve.

American Airlines tells The Register that the technology issue impacted systems necessary for flight releases. In response, the FAA reports that the airline requested a nationwide stop order, which began around 1150 UTC and lasted about an hour.

In a statement, the US' largest airline blamed a "vendor technology" issue for the disruption, but didn't name and shame any specific provider.

"That issue has been resolved and flights have resumed. We sincerely apologize to our customers for the inconvenience this morning. It's all hands on deck as our team is working diligently to get customers where they need to go as quickly as possible," an American Airlines spokesperson told The Register in an email.

American Airlines didn't address El Reg's questions as to whether resolving the issue could result in additional delays or disruptions over the holiday season.

The airline is encouraging customers to use their mobile app or visit their website for information on how the outage may have affected their flights and connections.

The incident comes amid one of the busiest travel seasons of the year, with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) expecting to screen nearly 40 million passengers over the peak Christmas and New Year's travel period.

As technology relayed travel disruptions go, an hour-long grounding is far from the worst. Over the past few years, we've seen numerous situations in which IT failures have left millions stranded. Two years ago, an IT meltdown at Southwest Airlines left roughly 2 million travelers stranded as crews were forced to schedule flights manually in what was later described as an "extraordinarily difficult" and "tedious, long process."

More recently, the now infamous Crowdstrike outage brought much of the IT world to a standstill. It is estimated the flawed update to the Falcon thread-detection system crashed and disabled more than 8 million Microsoft Windows machines around the world. Among them were more than 37,000 systems operated by Delta Airlines. The incident resulted in travel delays for more than 1.3 million people, the airline later revealed. ®

Send us news
16 Comments

Mystery border control outage causes misery at Malaysia/Singapore frontier

If this were a US scandal, we'd cal it 'Gategate'

Facebook, Threads, WhatsApp, Instagram stumble on and offline in global outage

What's an influencer to do?

SpaceX rocketeers get fresh FAA license for next Starship launch

Authorization comes less than a month after flight 6: 'The FAA continues to increase efficiencies'

Aliens, spy balloons, or drones? SUV-sized mystery objects spotted in US skies

No word from the FBI about where they are hiding aliens or UFOs

NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory datacenter flooded, offline until 2025

Burst water pipe blots out the Sun – or at least the data about it collected from two probes

NHS major 'cyber incident' forces hospitals to use pen and paper

Systems are isolated and pulled offline, while scheduled procedures are canceled

API error knocks PayPal, Venmo offline around the globe

It's fixed now, but aside from an error with the Braintree GraphQL API it's not clear what happened

Pakistan's tech lobby warns that slow internet is strangling IT industry

Low-priced freelancers and call centers are at risk

Verizon wobbles on the East Coast, outage cuts off night owls

T-Mobile US and Comcast also stutter slightly

'Cybersecurity issue' at Food Lion parent blamed for US grocery mayhem

Stores still open, but customers report delayed deliveries, invoicing issues, and more at Stop & Shop and others

Delta officially launches lawyers at $500M CrowdStrike problem

Legal action comes months after alleging negligence by Falcon vendor

Washington courts grapple with statewide outage after 'unauthorized activity'

Justice still being served, but many systems are down