Don't underestimate these character attacks. All it took was one "Yeah!" for Howard Dean to slip.
lemmyng
Don't you think he looks tired?
Fuck, you gave me half a heart attack thinking I overslept Sunday.
Regulation won't work, because regulation moves slowly, and these companies find workarounds fast. And as long as the cost of breaking the rule is less than the benefits of doing so, it'll be "just the cost of doing business."
If the sensor was using eBPF (as any modern sensor on Linux should) then the faulty update would have made the sensor crash, but the system would still be stable. But CrowdStrike has a long history of using stupid forms of integration, so I wouldn't put it past them to also load a kernel module that fucks things up unless it's blacklisted in the bootloader. Fortunately that kind of recovery is, if not routine, at least well documented and standardized.
ASD can be diagnosed from the flora, but it's not caused by it. That'd be like saying that hurricanes are caused by destroyed beach homes.
"Approve" is not the same as "want". 79% of democrats would likely approve of a ham sandwich if that was the only alternative to the cheeto.
"Do you find my helmet... wisible?"
(Personal preference) I would symlink them as subdirectories, so not ~/Downloads
but e.g. ~/Downloads/shared
. This way you can unmount the NTFS drive at will, and still have a functional directory.
Bottom when baking, top when serving.
They do have a bpf sensor. It's still shite, managing to periodically peg a CPU core on an idle system. They just lifted and shifted their legacy code into the bpf sensor, they don't actually make good use of eBPF capabilities.