Musk Says He’s Deleted CrowdStrike From Systems After Outage
(www.bloomberg.com)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (61)
sorted by:
I work with a guy who was previously in the finance sector of IT, one of the odd things that he has informed me of is how cheap they are and their attitude towards IT. It is like IT wasn't earning its way so they weren't getting respect and resources etc.
The very notion seems insane to me in the IT age where your business is heavily dependent on the IT being up all the time no excuses accepted. I have to imagine that this incident is a wake up call for a bunch of industries.
I'm not a IT person but even so I know full well to test before deployment. Heck I won't update the kernel on my PC before I have confirmed that I have a recent Timeshift to draw from if need be. The backups are created automatically but even so I still confirm.
Given that beancounters can't put a price on downtimes until they actually happen or the productivity increases from implementing good IT, this will continue to happen. This is another reason why corporate cybersecurity is just a box ticking exercise giving the illusion everything is going well.
This incident has a convenient scapegoat, everyone will crucify Crowdstrike switch the EDR vendor and continue coasting in neutral. Hell Crowdstrike isn't even on the cheap side so the beancounters will be happy if the new vendor is cheaper.
You imply you're running a Linux distro so you're already a cut above the regular MBAs who have the business awareness of dementia patients.
Consider that the vast majority of their peers, and the end customer's check signatories, would benefit from such dementia.
As always, may the best marketers win.