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https://www.cnbc.com/2024/07/19/crowdstrike-suffers-major-outage-affecting-businesses-around-the-world.html
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If such a huge security company cannot get this right, there's no way in hell one can trust a game company to do so.
Last edited by emphy on 19 July 2024 at 10:31 am UTC
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I haven't thought of that until now...
Don't let companies control your computers seems to be the lesson here.
Last edited by BlackBloodRum on 19 July 2024 at 10:39 am UTC
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Also I wonder if they had used Linux instead in affected places if there would have been the need for such a security framework in the first place or if this is all to be blamed on the flawed system architecture of MS Windows?
Yes, fully.
The big boy security business works different than you might expect.
A hack can cost billions and your career if when and you don't know when or where it will come, but because of the risk if you can't proof you've a strategy against it you will have a problem.
As such the relevant authority figures will (understandably) simply try to buy it off, because when you've bought protection you can simply show the receipts and say: "they were just too strong".
This is true for Linux and windows.
Linux/windows hacks exist.
As such Linux/windows security products exist.
Now what would a (legit) linux security product offer.
A sanitized 3rd party backup of all the data and clean images of the relevant programs against ransomware.
Company specific monitoring.
If I can measure enough legit activity I can make a stricter permission structure.
If due to measuring I find out that the director of hr never queries the age of people and only their salaries I can revoke their access to it, so that if they get hacked an attack will be harder.
etc.
Security is in its very basic about restricting things and people.
E2E encryption restricts anyone without the relevant private key from reading.
signature schemes restrict anyone without the relevant private key from editing.
Cloud strike is about restricting unauthorized computers from reading a select set of files.
What I expect happened is that someone made a mistake and restricted something that should've been kept available.
Snakeoil is really easy to keep from crashing computers.
Just make it do nothing and don't put it in the boot section.
And why does everyone want to use the same security system for all systems?
This is the first news on ddg a Reddit one
I experience it first hand and was a shitty shitty day, if you want to have all the certification in place for the audits and don't want to spend a shit ton of money you need Crowdstrike, it make you check all the boxes and all management is happy.
Now it has change the way that it works a different way so will be harder to break the kernel boot.
But we are facing the same issues on our side of the fence.
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So I guess the actual question is if CrowdStrike is a viable business partner then and some should maybe look for alternate solutions?
Wait those losers first crashed Linux servers and were like:
this is fiiine and pushed the update to windows too.
Edit: also apparently linux servers are better tested than windows server.
For the linux servers it resulted in an angry call from QA for the windows servers it resulted in world wide outages.
Linux the racing stripe of a server.
Last edited by LoudTechie on 22 July 2024 at 11:37 am UTC
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