cross-posted from: https://awful.systems/post/1965658

Kind of sharing this because the headline is a little sensationalist and makes it sound like MS is hard right (they are, but not like this) and anti-EU.

I mean, they probably are! Especially if it means MS is barred from monopolies and vertical integration.

  • misk@sopuli.xyz
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    2 months ago

    All that EU mandates is equal access to system features by the competitors.

    What Microsoft is saying is that they would never fuck up like Crowdstrike did. That’s bullshit - they are human too and need security enforced at an architectural level. The other thing that Microsoft is saying is that they could not prevent this. That’s also bullshit because others did.

    Windows and Linux allow third party apps to run at kernel / driver level and consequences of that are on those operating systems. It wasn’t even the first time this happened. Crowdstrike was responsible for similar issue on Linux earlier this year and it was also caused by a kernel module crash.

    Apple doesn’t allow kernel / driver level access for apps and replaced those with API few years ago. It’s no coincidence Crowdstrike didn’t manage to break MacOS so far. There’s nothing stopping Microsoft from implementing something similar.

    Obviously Crowdstrike is at fault here but so is Microsoft.

  • connaisseur@feddit.org
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    2 months ago

    Soooo… EU is responsible to write Crowdstrike code with bugs that gets deployed without any QA? Interesting. And EU is directing rules for the rest of the world as well, where the same issue happened as within EU? This is populist bullshit in full swing.

    • KasimirDD@feddit.org
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      2 months ago

      As far as I understand it, the EU is to blame because it forced Microsoft to open up the Windows kernel for software such as Crowdstrike’s. Why the Linux kernel has protection against precisely the flaw that has occurred and the Windows kernel does not, however, remains MS’s secret.

      • connaisseur@feddit.org
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        2 months ago

        The regulation only states that there must be a level playing field with respect to API access and possibilities in comparison for Microsoft tools and 3rd party tools. The regulation does not state that the APIs have to be inherently insecure and unstable if used in a wrong way, which is what happened. Crowdstrike released a buggy update that crashed their own driver, which is just showing how bad their software as a whole really is.