JAKARTA CrowdStrice, a security solution provider, launched a Post-initial Incident Review (PIR) on Wednesday, July 24. This report relates to an update that caused 8.5 million Windows devices to strike. In PIR's initial report, CrowdStrice explained that they had carried out the entire testing phase, including Template InterProcessCommunization (IPC) to detect new attacks through abuse of Named Pipes. While conducting stress testing in March, the template IPC worked well and passed testing. The IPC distance template was finally released in stages last April and ran without any problems. However, on July 19, the added IPC template included bugs. "Two additional IPC Template Instances have been implemented. Due to the presence of bugs in Content Validator, one of the two template Distances passed validation despite containing problematic content data," explains CrowdStrice in its report.
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The company added, updating content received by the system and loaded into Content Interpreter content is problematic. As a result, this bug causes a crash on the system and gives rise to a Blue Screen of Death (BSOD). Troubled content on Channel File 291 results in memory reading beyond the limits that trigger exceptions. This unexpected exception cannot be handled properly, resulting in a Windows operating system crash (BSOD). CrowdStrice has fixed the problem by performing Quick Response. To prevent the same thing from happening again, the company is doing robustness and repeating software testing. All of this is done to improve fault management.
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