Operating systems are moving as much software out of the low level kernel space as they can. On Windows, the entire GPU driver can crash and the OS will just flash a black screen and recover. Your games and browser probably go down with the driver, but that important Word document you had open in the background will survive.
In this case, there’s no way to implement the features at hand anywhere but deep down at the kernel level. It’s like anticheat but except for intercepting cheating software it’s intercepting all software that looks a bit suspicious. There are ways to protect against this (running applications in a virtual machine with a microkernel of their own for instance) but in practice this won’t work for the type of user Windows mostly serves.
As long as software like CrowdStrike is necessary, we run the risk of this stuff crashing. However, the impact doesn’t need to be this high; the reason everything went to shit is that every company installed this one piece of software onto their critical machines, rather than diversifying and having two different vendors. They probably don’t want twice the management overhead and twice the price, but they could’ve gone with a competitor on half their systems and only have half their services crash.
That has been a thing forever. I doubt it will ever go away.
Operating systems are moving as much software out of the low level kernel space as they can. On Windows, the entire GPU driver can crash and the OS will just flash a black screen and recover. Your games and browser probably go down with the driver, but that important Word document you had open in the background will survive.
In this case, there’s no way to implement the features at hand anywhere but deep down at the kernel level. It’s like anticheat but except for intercepting cheating software it’s intercepting all software that looks a bit suspicious. There are ways to protect against this (running applications in a virtual machine with a microkernel of their own for instance) but in practice this won’t work for the type of user Windows mostly serves.
As long as software like CrowdStrike is necessary, we run the risk of this stuff crashing. However, the impact doesn’t need to be this high; the reason everything went to shit is that every company installed this one piece of software onto their critical machines, rather than diversifying and having two different vendors. They probably don’t want twice the management overhead and twice the price, but they could’ve gone with a competitor on half their systems and only have half their services crash.