The short answer is no, being kernel level lets you inspect all programs running on the machine, but as explained in the video this hack can happen on a completely separate machine using only a capture card (imagine an HDMI cable that splits in 2, one output goes to a monitor, the other goes to a second computer) and a special controller that allows a program to send controller inputs to the game. These are both completely transparent to your computer (they look exactly like a normal HDMI cable and controller respectively) and there’s not much that a kernel-level anti-cheat can do.
The short answer is no, being kernel level lets you inspect all programs running on the machine, but as explained in the video this hack can happen on a completely separate machine using only a capture card (imagine an HDMI cable that splits in 2, one output goes to a monitor, the other goes to a second computer) and a special controller that allows a program to send controller inputs to the game. These are both completely transparent to your computer (they look exactly like a normal HDMI cable and controller respectively) and there’s not much that a kernel-level anti-cheat can do.