198
this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2024
198 points (97.1% liked)
Technology
59656 readers
2704 users here now
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related content.
- Be excellent to each another!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
Approved Bots
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Debunked.
Ironically it debunks it by saying, yes, Southwest has key scheduling applications running on 3.1 and 95.
No it doesn't, nowhere does it say that.
That kind of language will get you kicked in the balls by engineers. Sure. It should make it "clear" that they're not running on *this OS or that OS.
And what should also be made clear is that statement is an assumption. A probable one, IMO, a reasonable one, but an assumption nonetheless and therefore no one can call it a fact unless they just want to pretend to be right.
I ojbect to using language like "it looks like a thing so it's OBVIOUSLY a thing, you morons" being presented as irrefutable evidence of some sort.
The fact that it's an assumption should further make it clear that no, this is not a fact, and stating it as a fact is bullshit or deliberate misrepresentation.
Where does it say that? It says that the source says that they are mobile apps (so obviously NOT Windows) that "look like they were designed for Windows 95".
I don't know what "look historic" is supposed to mean, but if it looks like it was developed on Windows 95 that's 99% of the time because it was developed on Windows 95. Mobile apps "are available" wasn't as definitive as perhaps the author intended - meaning what, exactly? It's an option?
If it's a homegrown app (and good for them if so - every weasel IT manager in the world has been trying to bring them down for it since day one I'll bet), and it was written originally for Win95 and it's still in use, the bet would be it's run inside a VM on whatever they use now. Should whatever they use now go into a boot loop - theoretically - they could run it natively if they had to.
All speculation of course.
-removed-
It was what crowdstrike themselves told us to do!!!! but I get bad faith questions assumptions and exaggerations out of people allegedly in my field here on Lemmy. Bullshit. You clowns belonged back on reddit. You are the worst kind of people.
Complexity increases exponentially in large organizations, for a number of reasons.
I know my industry thanks. I've over a decade of experiance in sizable complex organizations. You know who really likes to cling to outdated hardware and software? Hopefully this scares you because it should: medical organizations.
What the IT people did (and what others claimed was done) during this fiasco was objectively worse than the actual fix but everyone in this thread just isn't happy that I didn't join them in shitting on microsoft. This is where lemmy shows that its users are becoming more like reddit users every day. Or don't know what /s means.
Hopefully none of those systems were exposed to anything internet facing for obvious reasons, but given the shear incompetance observed I wouldn't be surprised.
Hi, I also know my industry, with over a quarter century of experience in Fortune 500 companies. The old motto of IT used to be 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it' and then salespeople found out that fear is a great sales tool.
When proper precautions are taken and a risk analysis is performed there is no reason that old operating systems and software can't continue to be used in production environments. I've seen many more systems taken down from updates gone wrong than from running 'unsupported' software. Just because a system is old, doesn't mean it is vulnerable, often the opposite is true.
Theres not fixing what ain't broke and there is refusing to budget to move on when needed. There are a lot of ifs and assumptions in your reply trying to put me in my place here. Old software that won't run on anything modern becomes a recipe for disaster when said hardware breaks down and can't be replaced with anything that functions.
Fuck it lets see if all 3 of my replies can get to negative 3 digits: none of this matters because the original problem was pretty damm easy to fix but here I am taking shit on social media for saying so.
P.s. in medical client sitiations there are compliance laws involved, and I keep seeing hospitals and practices not meet them until they start eating fines because they want to use every machine till it literly falls apart.
Yes, yes it is if you run bitlocker with external verification.
It's even harder if the server you use for the verification itself is down.
...and just how many PCs do you intend to "reboot into safemode delete one bad file and then reboot again"? Manually, or do you have some remote access tool that doesn't require a running system?
If you have no idea how long it may take and if the issue will return - and particularly if upper management has no idea - swapping to alternate solutions may seem like a safer bet. Non-Tech people tend to treat computers with superstition, so "this software has produced an issue once" can quickly become "I don't trust anything using this - what if it happens again? We can't risk another outage!"
The tech fix may be easy, but the manglement issue can be harder. I probably don't need to tell you about the type of obstinate manager that's scared of things they don't understand and need a nice slideshow with simple words and pretty pictures to explain why this one-off issue is fixed now and probably won't happen again.
As for the question of scale: From a quick glance we currently have something on the order of 40k "active" Office installations, which mostly map to active devices. Our client management semi-recently finished rolling out a new, uniform client configuration standard across the organisation ("special" cases aside). If we'd had CrowdStrike, I'd conservatively estimate that to be at least 30k affected devices.
Thankfully, we don't, but I know some amounts of bullets were being sweated until it was confirmed to only be CrowdStrike. We're in Central Europe, so the window between the first issues and the confirmation was the prime "people starting work" time.