Senate to release Y2K study 47
CNN has a story about a Senate
study into Y2K. It also involves the Justice Department and
restrictions on Y2K lawsuits. I never thought I'd see members of the
government try to help out writers of buggy software, but it seems
to be the case.
JAE (Score:1)
No Subject Given (Score:1)
"The year 2000 will eventually arrive."
We need Tort reform (Score:1)
This country is insane. Petty lawsuits damage our economy more than most realize. These legal issues are not unique to this Y2K problem - they are indicative of our entire Judicial system. Limiting Y2K liability is like putting a bandaid on a gunshot wound. Nothing short of full fledged tort reform will help.
Lawyers... (Score:1)
Eventually it will be uneconomic to be anything except a lawyer in America. You won't be able to afford to drive because insurance will be so high with everyone suing everyone - you'll need to work as a lawyer to pay for it.
The founding fathers were mostly lawyers, your politicians all mostly lawyers eventually you'll all be lawyers...
America - government of the lawyers, by the lawyers, for the lawyers.
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JAE (Score:1)
BTW, I've been hanging around c.s.y2k for a while.
Yesterday (March 1) was the start of fiscal 2000, which was supposed to bring on a whole slew of so-called "Jo-Anne Effect" bugs from the 9-month look-aheads. So far I haven't seen anything.
Hm.
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If the clock is fsck'ed up... (Score:1)
Like the old AD&D rule: If your character dies of poison, cure the poison *before* ressurecting him or he will just die of poison again.
Yeesh, AD&D analogies. How geeky is that.
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Real estate? (Score:1)
Buy precious metals, you can carry them with you.
Hurry though, the US Mint has already run out of silver
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But FOOD man! (Score:1)
You could grow stuff on it, that would be something anyhow.
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Why worry about Y2K? (Score:1)
Seems like politicians are getting lobbied and taxpayers are getting scammed by irresponsible businesses that hire and buy incomp programmers. They want to be bailed out with all these studies.
Medical machines, etc. (Score:1)
A dialysis machine has no business knowing what year it is anyway. All devices should be kept simple, rather than adding every possible feature and bug.
What buggy chip? (Score:1)
Are these chips microcontrollers? Where is this list? Or is this those old famous bios clock cards that were in 8088 computers that can no longer run Microsoft software? Who is this senator and does this list show actual part numbers, ie: 68HC11E2?
I still think this is a scam blown up to sensational proportions. A better use of our money may be spent on fixing current bugs, like in NT. We know the company who should be responsible for those damages. Would you like to know NT is being used in production lines now? Want to know how much scrap can be produced due to one malfunction or crash?
Buggy software? (Score:1)
As far as lawsuits go, it needs to be balanced with how much of a good-faith effort the vendor made to correct the software, the nature of the warrantee provided with the software, and just how much the bug hurt the customer.
doj OPPOSES litigation relief (Score:1)
Get rich in court (Score:1)
Money Talks (Score:1)
The bill, sponsored by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-California), sets a 90-day "problem-solving" period during which companies can fix problems before lawsuits can be filed; encourages mediation; caps punitive damages at $250,000; puts some restrictions on class-action lawsuits; makes it easier for judges to dismiss Y2K lawsuits by setting higher standards for claims; and limits the personal liability of corporate officers and directors to $100,000 in many cases.
OK, so let me get this straight...
Let's suppose that a bank, for whatever stupid reason, is using WinNT to handle their systems. Y2k comes and the bank's systems crash. Microsoft now has a 90 day period to come up with a bug fix. Meanwhile the bank is still up the creek, as are the bank's customers, and the businesses that depend on those customers, and so on. In the space of 90 days a whole town can go bankrupt. The town residents file a class action lawsuit, they recover actual damages plus a maximum of $250k?? What's wrong here? Who the hell are these politicians listening to?
The REAL winners in all this mess will be... (Score:1)
the LAWYERS! I heard one news story suggesting that lawyers were "salivating" over the opportunities for litigation associated with Y2K. I don't doubt it for a minute.
chapter 11 (Score:1)
for bankruptcy -- this is sort of analogous...mind you not that I support it, but the logic behind it, preventing many software
companies from going under, makes a certain amount of sense..it would be better if they legislated
mandatory free patches/fixes/etc (since many of the problems are hardware and firmware, as well
as software)
but yeah, corporate welfare in any form sucks
rark
Buggy software my ass! (Score:1)
It's 1985 and you're told to write a piece of software. It's design life is given to you as 5-6 years. So are you going to make it Y2K compliant? Of COURSE NOT, since that increases cost/time to deployment. You get fired that way.
Then the beancounters decide NOT to replace it as planned but to keep it for 250% the original planned lifespan to save a buck. And then it's 1999 and suddenly this is a BUG?
Get wise.
Y2K liability limits (Score:1)
Personally, I don't much like broad limits on liability. If a company blew it, they should be responsible for the results. I'd prefer:
Y2K is the biggest pile of BS (Score:1)
January 1, 2000 will arrive and everyone will have the same look on there face when they were about to behold the great treasure of Al Capones vault. The hype applied by Heroldo for 2+hrs led to a large nothing...sound similar...wait and see.
Lawyers...yes, they suck! (Score:1)
What I wouldn't give for a scenario like this to
unfold...
--C