
SentinelOne says services restored after hours-long outage
SentinelOne says its services have been restored following an hours-long outage today that took down its commercial customer consoles — the interface security teams use to monitor and manage protections across their networks.
Why it matters: Without console access, teams were effectively flying blind — unable to view threat telemetry, assess incidents in progress, or take manual response actions.
Yes, but: While security teams didn't have visibility, the products continued working in the background to block malicious activity. Security teams just couldn't see what was being blocked or flagged during the outage.
The intrigue: One of SentinelOne's biggest competitors — CrowdStrike — suffered a major global outage last summer that knocked about 8.5 million Windows devices offline.
SentinelOne has not yet disclosed the root cause of Thursday's outage, but said its early internal data suggests it was not caused by a malicious cyberattack.
"We apologize for the inconvenience," the company wrote in a blog post Thursday during the outages.
Driving the news: The outage came just one day after SentinelOne lowered its 2026 earnings forecast and missed expectations for quarterly annual recurring revenue in its latest earnings report.
The company has also been in the spotlight in Washington this year after President Trump signed a memo calling for an investigation into former CISA Director Chris Krebs, who at the time was a top executive at SentinelOne.
The big picture: SentinelOne is a publicly traded cybersecurity company that uses artificial intelligence to detect, prevent and respond to malicious activity across a company's devices, like a laptop or server.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
21 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Podcast: Trump's Plan B After Trade Court Setback
Last week, an obscure trade court dropped a bombshell ruling: President Trump didn't have the authority to issue sweeping tariffs under a 1977 law. The government has appealed the court's decision. WSJ's James Fanelli and Gavin Bade dig into the ruling and what it could mean for the future of Trump's trade agenda. Annie Minoff hosts. 🎧 Listen here to The Journal podcast.

Wall Street Journal
26 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Global Markets, U.S. Futures Lower on Trade Tensions
Global stocks and U.S. futures started the new month lower after President Trump threatened to double tariffs on steel and aluminum, and trade tensions escalated between China and the U.S. Late Friday, Trump said he would increase tariffs on steel and aluminum up to 50%, starting Wednesday. The president also accused China of breaking a trade truce agreed in mid-May, which China has denied.

Wall Street Journal
32 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Heard on the Street Friday Recap: Trade-Truce Trouble
The U.S.-China trade truce looked at risk of falling apart . President Trump and his trade representative called out Beijing for not fulfilling its commitments. China's slow-walking on rare-earth exports is fueling U.S. recriminations . Trump said he would double tariffs on steel and aluminum to 50%, as of June 4. He announced the higher duties at a rally promoting the $14 billion deal between Tokyo-based Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel.