this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2024
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A few years ago when my org got the ask to deploy the CS agent in linux production servers and I also saw it getting deployed in thousands of windows and mac desktops all across, the first thought that came to mind was "massive single point of failure and security threat", as we were putting all the trust in a single relatively small company that will (has?) become the favorite target of all the bad actors across the planet. How long before it gets into trouble, either because if it's own doing or due to others?
I guess that we now know
Hmm. Is it safer to have a potentially exploitable agent running as root and listening on a port, than to not have EDR running on a well-secured low-churn enterprise OS - sit down, Ubuntu - adhering to best practice for least access and least-services and good role-sep?
It's a pickle. I'm gonna go with "maybe don't lock down your enterprise Linux hard and then open a yawning garage door of a hole right into it" but YMMV.
All of the security vendors do it over enough time. McAfee used to be the king of them.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/defective-mcafee-update-causes-worldwide-meltdown-of-xp-pcs/
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/trend-micro-antivirus-modified-windows-registry-by-mistake-how-to-fix/
https://www.techradar.com/news/microsoft-releases-fix-for-botched-windows-defender-update-but-its-still-facing-problems