There's a really mad moment in that interview where they ask them what assistance CrowdStrike have offered, and he essentially says nothing, not even a lunch voucher.
What a time to be alive.
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There's a really mad moment in that interview where they ask them what assistance CrowdStrike have offered, and he essentially says nothing, not even a lunch voucher. What a time to be alive. 7 comments
CrowdStrike complained to Cloudflare about a CrowdStrike parody site… and Cloudflare took it down. Without a court order. https://clownstrike.lol/crowdmad/ Cloudflare recently announced they have become a strategic partner with CrowdStrike: https://www.cloudflare.com/en-gb/press-releases/2024/crowdstrike-and-cloudflare-announce-expanded-strategic-partnership-to-secure/ Additionally to loop this in, CrowdStrike submitted a takedown for a parody label (they’ve since rescinded it after being called out). We’ve reached the part of the brand cycle where people are using CrowdStrike as an excuse https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/2/24212298/mrbeast-beast-games-crowdstrike Previously on Crowdstrike Falcon vulnerability research, check out this timeline where they tried to use NDAs to avoid disclosure, then fixed it without telling anybody. https://modzero.com/modlog/archives/2022/08/22/ridiculous_vulnerability_disclosure_process_with_crowdstrike_falcon_sensor/index.html @GossiTheDog I had a similar experience with Microsoft. A junior colleague found a 1-click exploit in Skype for Linux. We reported it. We didn't want any bounty money - just to be assigned a CVE that we could include in our paper. Microsoft's response was essentially "it's not an RCE, go away". Then they silently fixed it, without crediting us. Never every doing the "responsible disclosure" dance with Microsoft ever again. |
CrowdStrike’s website then vs now