It's: a) an update, b) pushed out globally without proper testing, c) that bricked the OS.
It's an obvious failure mode that if you have a proper incident response process would be revealed from that specific incident and flagged for needing mitigation.
I do this specific thing for a living. You don't just address the exact failure that happened but try to identify classes of risk in your platform.
> Even if you could, you'd still need to deploy a fix before the OS update hits the customers, and anyone that didn't update would still be affected.
And yet the problem would still only affect Crowdstrike's paying customers. No matter how much you blame upstream your paying customers are only ever going to blame their vendor because the vendor had discretion to test and not release the update. As their customers should.
Sure, customers are free to blame their vendor. But please, we’re on HN, we aren’t customers, we don’t have beef in this game. So we can do better here, and properly allocate blame, instead of piling on the cs hate for internet clout.
And again, you cannot prevent your vendor breaking you. Sure, you can magic some convoluted process to catch it asap. But that won’t help the poor sods who got caught in-between.
It's: a) an update, b) pushed out globally without proper testing, c) that bricked the OS.
It's an obvious failure mode that if you have a proper incident response process would be revealed from that specific incident and flagged for needing mitigation.
I do this specific thing for a living. You don't just address the exact failure that happened but try to identify classes of risk in your platform.
> Even if you could, you'd still need to deploy a fix before the OS update hits the customers, and anyone that didn't update would still be affected.
And yet the problem would still only affect Crowdstrike's paying customers. No matter how much you blame upstream your paying customers are only ever going to blame their vendor because the vendor had discretion to test and not release the update. As their customers should.