Vendors of tools like this drive the cybersecurity industry discourse, so 'defense in depth' often practically sorta means 'add more software that does more things'.
But maybe this kind of thing can actually impart the lesson that loading your OS up with always-on, internet-connected agents that include kernel components in order to instrument every little thing any program does on the system is, uh, kinda risky.
But maybe not. I wonder if we'll just see companies flock to alternative vendors of the exact same type of product.
But maybe this kind of thing can actually impart the lesson that loading your OS up with always-on, internet-connected agents that include kernel components in order to instrument every little thing any program does on the system is, uh, kinda risky.
But maybe not. I wonder if we'll just see companies flock to alternative vendors of the exact same type of product.