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Technology Stocks : Discuss Year 2000 Issues -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: David Eddy who wrote (5598)4/28/1999 7:44:00 AM
From: J.L. Turner  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
Sci/Tech

Chernobyl virus causes Asian meltdown

Like its namesake, the Chernobyl virus has caused global alarm

By Internet Correspondent Chris Nuttall
Hundreds of thousands of computers in Asia and the Middle East have had their
data wiped by a malicious program known as the Chernobyl virus.

It was timed to strike on Monday, the 13th anniversary of the nuclear reactor
disaster, and computer network managers in the regions have since been
counting the cost.

While Chernobyl, a variant of the CIH macro virus, had a damaging impact in
some parts of the world, the US and Europe seem to have largely escaped its
effects.

Chernobyl around since June

CIH was discovered as long ago as last June in Taiwan. But despite warnings
about its deadly effects from anti-virus software companies since then, it
still appears to have wreaked havoc in certain countries.

In the West, companies had protected their computers with anti-virus programs
that killed it, but in Asia and the Middle East the same precautions had been
ignored in many cases.
news.bbc.co.uk

Chernobyl also spreads through pirated software, which is rife in these parts
of the world. The virus deletes all information stored on computers and can
even wipe out the BIOS - the basic instructions that tell the computer to
start.

Asian countries worst-hit

Countries in Asia appear to have been affected the worst by the virus:

China: The state-run media reported that more than 100,000 computers had been
affected across China.
South Korea: Government officials apologised for not taking more urgent action
and estimated that 250,000 PCs were attacked and $250m in damage had been
caused.
India: More than 30,000 computers had crashed, said experts and officials.
Major industries, banks and other financial institutions had been badly hit.
Middle East suffers 'catastrophe'

Middle East and Gulf countries were also badly hit:

Israel: Israeli data recovery experts said there had been a catastrophe with
thousands of computers affected, including those of a major financial
institution, an intelligence organisation and a large Internet Service
Provider.
Egypt: Companies in Cairo sent workers home as their systems were paralysed by
the virus. "It's a disaster," said one civil engineering firm.
The Gulf: Industry in the United Arab Emirates estimated that 5-10% of
computers had been affected, while there were reports from Qatar of the
infection reaching "epidemic" proportions.
Turkey: Banks, police departments, an army school, state television and
government offices were hit.
Chernobyl has not been propagated to the same extent as the recent Melissa
virus, which jammed networks with e-mail, but it has caused far greater damage



To: David Eddy who wrote (5598)4/28/1999 8:03:00 AM
From: J.L. Turner  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
Cheeky would be very unhappy to see his guru debunked.
Westergaard Year 2000
April 27, 1999
Unbelievable: Misinformation about The Dreaded Nines
By E.L. Core

(http://www.y2ktimebomb.com/Computech/Issues/lcore9917.htm)

Computers are complicated. So, information about computers is
complicated. And misinformation about computers is complicated and,
unfortunately, widespread.

I have already written at length about the alleged "Nines Problem" --
that problems will occur when processing data for April 9, 1999, and
September 9, 1999 -- in two articles: The Dreaded Nines: Will They Be
So Bad? [http://www.y2ktimebomb.com/Computech/Issues/lcore9846.htm]
and More on The Dreaded Nines and Other Proverbial Dates
[http://www.y2ktimebomb.com/Computech/Issues/lcore9850.htm]. (If you
are unfamiliar with this topic, I strongly urge you to read those
articles if you want to continue reading here.) I also wrote about
them briefly at the conclusion of NERC's April 9 Y2K Drill: What It
Is, And What It Is Not
[http://www.y2ktimebomb.com/Industry/Utilities/lcore9914.htm].

But, on April 20, I came across a tortured mishmash of misinformation
on the "Nines Problem" that I want to examine in detail. It is in the
form of question-and-answer. My comments are interspersed between the
quoted sections that follow.

"Question: Some questions from my employees concern the date 9-9-99.
Is there any concern for this date rolling over to all zeroes on
systems? -- John"

That question, in one form or another, is unfortunately quite common.
As I have pointed out, 4-9-99 and 9-9-99 have been Y2K Red Herrings:
"In one way or another, Y2K Alarmists have trumpeted those days as
harbingers of the computer problems to come in 2000. Though each day,
in its own way, may have relatively minor data-processing problems,
their connection with Y2K is tenuous" (Don't Chase the Y2K Red
Herrings [http://www.y2ktimebomb.com/Media/lcore9915.htm]).

"Answer: Sept. 9, 1999, is one of two dates thought to be susceptible
to what is known as the 'Nines Problem.' When programmers writing
applications want to signify an 'end-of-file' or 'end-of-process'
command -- in other words, a condition that tells the computer 'if you
see this date, you can stop' -- some used a date with four nines in a
row, or '9999'...."

The "nines" situation posited here does not involve merely four nines
in a row as a trigger, but the appropriate number of nines in a row.
If the data field in question allowed a maximum of three digits -- for
current age, say -- then three nines would be the trigger (but only if
the software was programmed accordingly). In a six-digit date field,
then, the appropriate number of nines would be six, not four; in a
five-digit date field, it would be five nines in a row.

"April 9, which recently passed without any errors making their way
into the public eye, is the 99th day of the year. If a programmer used
the Julian calendar -- which most folks stopped using when Pope
Gregory introduced his innovations about 400 years ago -- there is the
possibility that they could inadvertently trigger the end-of-file
process."

My jaw dropped when I first read that paragraph. When programmers
speak of Julian dates, they are not talking about the Julian calendar,
but about a certain format in which dates are sometimes stored. (I
have explained this format in The Dreaded Nines.) I have no idea why
dates stored in that fashion are called Julian dates, but it
apparently comes from IBM usage. Dr. J. R. Stockton has called it "a
most unfortunate piece of nomenclature"; see his discussion of Our
Calendars [http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/miscdate.htm#Cals]. The
question-and-answer author explains storage of Julian dates correctly
-- well, almost -- in the next paragraph.

"The Julian calendar would produce a '9999' date only if it was
misformatted DDDYY, which would be '09999' on April 9. Correctly
formatted (YYDDD), however, April 9 would appear as '99099'...."
Storing a Julian date in "DDDYY" format is not a misformatting.
Sometimes, it is not only legitimate but advantageous to keep Julian
dates in that fashion, such as for a report that compares sales on a
given date with sales on the same date in the previous year.

"In the Gregorian calendar, Sept. 9 is '990909,' not '9999.' No matter
how badly mangled the Gregorian date format, it never produces
'9999'...."

September 9, 1999, is "990909" ("YYMMDD" format) or "090999" ("DDMMYY"
format). Julian calendar, Gregorian calendar, no matter.

"Presumably, if programmers decided to use a Julian calendar, they
would be aware of the potential problem with the string of four nines
when selecting an end-of-file command. Given the total absence of
reports of major system errors on April 9, almost all programmers did
avoid the series of mistakes that would have caused a problem."

I shudder. True, there were no reports of major (any?) data-processing
problems associated with April 9, 1999. But the explanation given here
is just nonsense. As I explained above, storing a Julian date as
"DDDYY" (which would make "09999" the Julian date of April 9, 1999) is
not a mistake. Nor is the posited trigger a series of four nines: it
is a series of all nines, and "09999" is not all nines.

"For the problem to kick in on Sept. 9, programmers would have had to
make even more mistakes while writing their software -- they would
have had to misformat the date in a way that defies logic." As if
programmers are incapable of defying logic.

Seriously, I have already explained at length in More on The Dreaded
Nines that data-processing problems may be associated with September
9, 1999 -- but not primarily because programmers have coded the
software poorly (though that may be true in some cases) nor for other
technical reasons which are not out of the question. Rather, because
users have decided on their own to pick certain dates and attach
special meanings to them -- one of those dates being September 9,
1999.

[BTW, "other technical reasons which are not out of the question" is
an allusion to the lack of EOF detection on older machines.]

"The Nines Problem is almost totally a myth, except for misformatted
Julian dates. And that critical date has already passed."

Hardly. Indeed, as I explained in More on The Dreaded Nines, the
argument for data-processing problems associated with September 9,
1999, has always been much better than that for April 9, 1999. Not
that I'm predicting major problems for 9/9/1999, mind you: I am
certainly not doing that. I'm just pointing out that the possibility
exists, however unlikely.

It would have been bad enough had such a question-and-answer article
-- such a mishmash of inaccuracies and outright errors -- come from,
say, a pastor trying to explain the "Nines Problem" to the readers of
his newsletter. Or from the director of a non-profit organization
trying to explain it to his staff. Or from a journalist trying to
explain it to the readers of a small-town newspaper. It would have
been bad enough -- but excusable. After all, computers are
complicated.

What would you say, though, if you knew that it came, not from a
reporter nor from a bureaucrat nor from a clergyman, but from the
"editorial director of Ziff-Davis' ZDY2K Web site and president of
Internet/Media Strategies Inc., a Lakewood, Wash.-based consulting
company" in an article "Special to ABCNEWS.com"?

Here it is, folks: No Revolution No. 9: Julian or Gregorian, Calendars
Avoid 9999
[http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/Y2KReady/y2kready990419.html].

Yes, what would you say? The first word that came to my mind was
"appalling". A week later it's still the word that comes to my mind.