• @TCB13
    link
    84 months ago

    I’m not in favor of a cashless society but looking at how Apple and Google are pushing their wallets (and how practical it is) you guys need to come to piece with the fact that cash might die with the millennial generation. Most Gen X don’t have / want a physical wallet and money needs to be digital.

    With that said, I believe this Crowdstrike fiasco just proved that the biggest threat to IT lies inside the companies themselves and on the managers who decide to use this kind malware without properly understanding the risks. Yes, I’ve said it and I’ll say it again Crowdstrike is malware, anything that messes with Windows at that level is malware, there’s no other description and shouldn’t be allowed by Microsoft to exist.

    • HubertManne
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      fedilink
      94 months ago

      Im the Xer type with no smartphone and prefers the wallet. I remember so many shows or street people with paranoia would have the horror of government trackers but I find the horror of corporate trackers to be much worse and far to real now.

      • @TCB13
        link
        44 months ago

        Yeah, those same people totally paranoid about govt tracker are now carrying smartphones around no problem, how ironic isn’t it? :)

    • Possibly linux
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      fedilink
      English
      44 months ago

      I carry cash and so do many of the younger people I know. It is handy sometimes and happens to be private.

      • @TCB13
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        English
        14 months ago

        Me too, but we’re not the majority.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      44 months ago

      Industry standard solution that protects companies against malware is malware? Any proper AV will have unrestricted access to system. Only other option is for companies to completely lock down your device.

      • @TCB13
        link
        44 months ago

        Here’s the thing, malware protection is supposed to deliver protection and one important aspect of that is making sure there’s business continuity… what they did was to completely fuck over their customers in that aspect, they become the problem and I bet that most companies running their solution would never suffer any catastrophic failure this bad if they didn’t run their software at all. No hacker would be able to take down so many systems so fast and so hard.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        4
        edit-2
        4 months ago

        Yes. It is.

        Any system with this level of access to the system should be opensource and tested against actual workloads before shipping updates to prod.

        Something like ebpf would make more sense too.