The whole point of software like this is a regulatory box-ticking exercise, no-one wants it to actually do anything except satisfy the regulator. Crowdstrike had less overhead and (until now) outages than its competitors, and the regulators were willing to tick the box, so of course people picked them. There are bad cases of people following the herd where there are other solutions with actually better functionality, but this isn't that.
OTOH... I remember an O365 outage in London a few years ago.
You're down? Great, so are your competitors, your customers, and your suppliers. Head to the pub. Actually, you'll probably get more real value there, as your competitors, customers and suppliers are at that same pub. Insurance multinationals have been founded from less.
That didn't affect any OT though, so it was more just proof that 90% of work carried out via O365 adds no real value. Knowing where the planes are probably is important.
> You're down? Great, so are your competitors, your customers, and your suppliers. Head to the pub. Actually, you'll probably get more real value there, as your competitors, customers and suppliers are at that same pub. Insurance multinationals have been founded from less.
I mean yeah, that's the other thing - the Keynesian sound banker aspect. But that's more for software that you're intentionally using for your business processes. I don't think anyone was thinking about Cloudstrike being down in the first place, unless they were worried about an outage in the webpage that lists all the security certifications they have.