Microsoft said early on Friday (Jul 19) that its cloud services outage in the central United States region was resolved after it led to the grounding and cancellation of several flights. Low-cost carriers Frontier Airlines, a unit of Frontier Group Holdings, Allegiant and SunCountry had reported out...
In a way it is a Microsoft problem. Windows can't handle live updates to the system like Linux can. Security updates mean downtime to be scheduled. So they need a program to do security, so CrowdStrike comes in to do security for these companies since Microsoft can't protect them. And mistakes happen.
Ah so it's a linux problem when the gpu driver causes instability, cause NVidia is making a shitty and proprietary linux driver and the market share is too small to warrant putting more effort in. Linux doesn't have it's own fully-featured graphics driver, so that company has to come in and provide their own since linux can't supply it. And mistakes happen. Roughly the same logic.
That's not linux fault. Neither is it Microsofts fault when a company selling a security product decides it has to run in kernel mode and then they don't properly test a release and just decide to yolo it.
You know the kind of companies that do this nonsense on windows have the same incentives and give the same access to third party "security" tools on Linux?
Windows sucks. But the fact that it's windows they broke is dumb luck.
Security definition updates can be installed without rebooting.
And Crowdstrike is a more advanced system compared to normal antivirus you would use at home. It's an endpoint protection system that does more than scan for viruses.
Microsoft offers their own alternative called Microsoft Defender for Endpoint.
Both Crowdstrike and Microsoft Defender for Endpoint are available on Windows, MacOS, and Linux.
Incidentally CrowdStrike has a Linux agent and my previous company was pushing us to install it to check another box on their Cyberliability insurance form. So this could just as easy happen there too.