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joaomacp | 1 year ago
I certainly don't want to know (through disaster news) about the construction company that built the bridge I drive through everyday, not for another 15 years, not ever!
This kind of software simply should not fail, with such a massive install base on so many sensitive industries. We're better than that, the software industry is starting to mature and there are simple and widely-known procedures that could have been used to prevent it.
I have no idea how CrowdStrike stock has only dropped 10% to the values of 2 months ago. Actually, if the financial troubles you get into are only these, take back what I said, software should be failing a lot (why spend money on robustness when you don't lose money on bugs?)
notepad0x90|1 year ago
I actually expected their stock to drop a lot more than this, but goes to show you how valuable they are. investors know that any dip is only temporary because no one is getting rid of crowdstrike.
Think of the security landscape as early 90's new york city at night and crowdstrike as the big bulky guy with lots of guns who protects you for a fee, if he makes a mistakes and hurts you, you will be mad but in the end your need for protection does not suddenly go away and it was a one time mistake.
TheOtherHobbes|1 year ago
You're trying to hand-wave away the inexcusable. The outage is a symptom. The problem is the lack of even the most basic testing.
Clearly these files are sent out without even a minimal sanity check. That is a problem, and it's not something that can be hand-waved away.