this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2024
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Windows kernel drivers are signed by Microsoft. They must have rubber stamped this for this to go through, though.
This was not the driver, it was a config file or something read by the driver. Now having a driver in kernel space depending on a config on a regular path is another fuck up
isn't .sys a driver?
Not just drivers, no https://fileinfo.com/extension/sys
So yes, .sys is by convention on Windows is for a kernel mode driver. However, Crowdstrike specifically uses .sys for non-driver files and this specifically was not a driver.
only the Windows version was affected
Not sure about Mac, but on Linux, they're signed by the distro maintainer or with the computer's secure boot key.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UEFI/SecureBoot
The outage only affected the Windows version of Falcon. OSX and Linux were not affected.
In this thread we're talking about the recent problem with CrowdStrike on Windows that brought down various services around the world. So I don't know who's bubble you think you're bursting by talking about something else.
what are you on about? who suggested anything about microsoft?
You look so kewl if I were a child again I'd speak just like you