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To: TEDennis who wrote (8860)11/12/1998 9:36:00 PM
From: jasgale  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10786
 
If we're rewarded "as well...meaning the same percentage as the revenue growth...egad...I think I'll retire!

TED

egad...I may break even! <g>

gale



To: TEDennis who wrote (8860)11/14/1998 1:29:00 PM
From: airborn  Respond to of 10786
 
I wish more company's fixing their Y2K problems would consider this article and use a good old USA company to fix their Y2K problems, say a company like ALYD!

' More than computers vulnerable to Y2K

The first radio signals from Sputnik 41 years ago helped redefine
American national security, just as the so-called Year 2000
computer
bug is underscoring the latest risks to a nation built on technology.

"The Year 2000 problem could be an event equivalent to the
launching
of Sputnik, (which) raised the awareness about the vulnerabilities
of the
United States," says Marvin Langston, deputy chief information
officer
for the Department of Defense.

The Year 2000 problem, or Y2K as it is commonly known, has
riveted
attention on what may happen when computers fail to recognize the
year 2000, disrupting internal clocks and causing system
shutdowns
and crashes.

Governments and corporations here and abroad are allowing
unprecedented access to computers as programmers look to fix the
Year 2000 bug. That's raising concerns about potential security
compromises, industrial espionage, even sabotage. And as in the
days
following Sputnik, analysts see a need for more domestic talent to
keep
U.S. technology on the cutting edge.

A serious re-evaluation of security issues has been under way
since last
year, when a presidential panel warned that the nation's economy
and
vital services were vulnerable to hacker-style attacks.

"In the millennium bug, we have developed a technology
equivalent to
natural forces. If it is anywhere, it is everywhere," says G.K.
Jayaram,
chairman of Transformation Systems of Princeton, N.J. "Nowhere
at
any time in human history has there existed such a problem."

Opening 'trap doors'

One of Jayaram's clients is Provident Bank of Cincinnati, which
boasts
that it is "among the nation's 100 largest banks, with 72 financial
centers
and over $6.7 billion in total assets."

It also has about 8.5 million lines of computer code, which
Jayaram's
firm upgraded for Y2K using a staff of 30 people in Cincinnati and
40
in Chennai, India, linked by satellite.

While Jayram's firm has a solid international reputation, the
increasingly
common practice of using overseas workers to handle U.S.
computer
systems concerns some people.

"We are looking, as an intelligence priority, very carefully for
people
who may present a threat in this area," says Richard Clarke, a
senior
National Security Council official.

"When systems are modified to be Y2K-compliant, the question
remains: Do you know what was changed?" says Sam Varnado of
Sandia National Labs, which is working on system security with
the
federal government and private industry.

It's a simple matter for a programmer handling computer source
code
to install, undetected, a secret entrance, or "trap door," which can
be
used to gain access to a system to read sensitive information, copy
records, alter files or transfer money.

"We have seen multiple times where Y2K activity has resulted in
trap
doors being placed in commercial systems," says Duane Andrews,
executive vice president with SAIC.

"It's a very serious matter," says John Sarazen, director of
SynComm
Group, a technology consulting firm. "An unprecedented amount of
code is being opened up right now as part of Year 2000."

Foreign code-busters

Outside the USA, programmers in India, Pakistan, Ireland and the
Philippines are doing most of the world's Y2K upgrades. And each
of
those nations has issues with the United States or a thriving
underground of anti-American terrorist groups.

Given the chilly relations between the United States and India
since it
and Pakistan conducted nuclear weapons tests earlier this year,
concerns are heightened by the amount of computer work done in
those countries.
....

usatoday.com