The worldwide outage of Windows PCs was because of European Commission demands, says Microsoft, and we should get used to it.
A typical "Blue Screen of Death" as seen by millions of people worldwide after the CrowdStrike update
The outage that closed airports, shut down hospitals, and took out television stations was actually caused because of a single Windows update. Security firm CrowdStrike pushed out a flawed update, which it admits created the problem.
However, Microsoft has now told the Wall Street Journal that the reason such an update could have a calamitous, global impact, is the fault of the European Commission. Specifically, a spokesperson said that EC agreements mean that Microsoft is not legally allowed to secure its systems the way Apple does.
Reportedly, in 2009, Microsoft agreed with the EC that it would provide equal access to Windows security developers that it has for its own teams. Therefore, CrowdStrike could push out an update without Microsoft necessarily even knowing about it.
This is Microsoft washing its hands of the issue. But it's also much more than that.
For this is Microsoft effectively saying that it allegedly cannot but certainly will not do anything to prevent this from happening again.
The Wall Street Journal notes that in 2020, Apple told security developers that they would no longer have what's called kernel access for their software. Microsoft security developers still have this type of access to Windows.