RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 8 November 2008 Volume 25 : Issue 44 ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks) Peter G. Neumann, moderator, chmn ACM Committee on Computers and Public Policy ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. ***** This issue is archived at <http://www.risks.org> as <http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/25.44.html> The current issue can be found at <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt> Contents: U.K. NHS computer system "grinds to a halt" (Richard Cook) Risk of repairing Hubble too soon (Ted Blank) New GPS satellite may crash some receivers (William P.N. Smith) Risks of unilingual vacation-reply messages (Mark Brader) US court throws out most software patents (John Oram via Monty Solomon) Beware: T-Mobile's Voicemail Paging Trap (Lauren Weinstein) Re: BBC Domesday Project (Mike Tibbetts) Re: Treasury Office Faults IRS Computer Security (Paul Robinson) Computers Freedom & Privacy Conference 2009 - Request For Proposals (Bruce R Koball) REVIEW: "Handbook of Research on Technoethics", Luppicini/Adell (Rob Slade) Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 03 Nov 2008 11:11:07 -0600 From: Richard Cook <ri-cook_at_private> Subject: U.K. NHS computer system "grinds to a halt" The Financial Times reports that implementation of the National Health Service's enormous healthcare information technology (HIT) system has been halted after incapacitating difficulties with a few installed sites. The 12.8 billion-pound (~US$21 billion) system has been plagued by difficulties including the withdrawal of one chief supplier, Accenture, in 2006 and the dismissal of a second, Fujitsu, in May of this year. The FT's report was denied in a carefully worded statement from Ms. Christine Connelly, the U.K.'s CIO for Health, who has been in her present position for just one month. She noted that the system was still be tested and that its deployment needed to be delayed it was possible to "fix technical issues but also to manage the impact on working practices". The government side of the project has been remarkable for senior staff changes. The Tory opposition has been quick to point out the project's shortcomings. Mr. Stephen O'Brien, shadow minister for health, is described the program as "hugely expensive" and "desperately behind schedule". MP Nick Clegg questioned PM Gordon Brown about "an NHS computer system that doesn't work" in the House of Commons but Mr. Brown's reply included only a lukewarm defense of the system. The government's Department of Health referred questions to "Connecting for Health" (previously identified as *NPfIT* for The National Programme for IT) which reportedly claimed that "things are moving, but slowly". According to the FT, the National Audit Office has said that the program is four years late. More importantly, key portions of the system have not been field tested and only a few hospitals are actually using the system for patient care. Only one "big acute care hospital has turned on a version of the new system since May." An internal NHS document reportedly titled "Lessons Learnt from the Royal Free Hospital Emergency Department" reveals many, unaddressed problems with the clinical system intended to support emergency services. In 2005, Fujitsu and Cerner were contracted to supply key portions of the system, replacing software vendor IDX because of poor performance. Fujitsu was fired in May of this year, a move which may have cost the company as much as 300 million pounds of its 896 million pound contract. Cerner's software was "bred in the US market... as a billing system that was being turned into a Patient Administration System" according to one critic quoted in the Inquirer. Another key element of the system is the Lorenzo Patient Management System, developed by iSoft. Problems with Lorenzo have delayed its go live in U.K. hospitals. The software is being built mainly in India for Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) and its subcontractor IBA Health which acquired iSoft. According to ComputerWeekly.com, NHS Connecting for Health staff said in June that "Lorenzo is being rigorously tested at early adopter sites with differing care settings and geographies to ensure it meets the necessary quality criteria and is relevant to the needs of diverse healthcare communities prior to going live within a working healthcare environment." According to The Guardian, Lorenzo was at the time of the statement "mired in development glitches and is still struggling to get out of the technical design phase". A major point of contention has been the tough contracts that prevent suppliers from being paid until the systems are working. Major suppliers, including BT, CSC, Fujitsu, Cerner, iSoft and others had earned only 1.29 billion pounds despite a business plan that expected them to have been paid 2.819 pounds by March. Perhaps not surprisingly, despite the widely acknowledged failure of the system itself the main suppliers and Connecting for Health continue to tout the benefits of IT. On October 22nd, Connecting for Health announced that standardized, electronic records will improve patient safety. According to the CSC website "NPfIT will improve the NHS and benefit all those who work in it and who use it by ensuring that the right information about a patient is available to the right people at the right time. It will improve the quality of time spent with patients by significantly reducing the administrative burden on clinicians and healthcare professionals." ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 18:47:16 -0400 From: "Ted Blank" <tedblank_at_private> Subject: Risk of repairing Hubble too soon Perhaps the operators on the Hubble should roll the dice and engage in some maneuvers which stress the vehicle slightly outside of normal limits to see what else is close to breaking so it can also be fixed on the repair mission. Of course if this goes too far, the only choice for Hubble repair might be long tow to the ISS (International Service Station) for its tune-up. Who has their AAA card? ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 01 Nov 2008 10:03:15 -0400 From: "William P.N. Smith" <w_smith_at_private> Subject: New GPS satellite may crash some receivers In the November 2008 issue of *BoatU.S.* magazine, there's a reference to a new GPS satellite being switched on. It uses the identifier "PRN 32", which causes some [...] Northstar GPS units to "become confused" and "shut down". Fortunately, there are firmware updates available, though in some cases they cost money. Unfortunately, most boaters wouldn't know a firmware update if they hooked one, so there will undoubtedly be accidents and other problems, and GPS units "acting flakey" (they only crash when that particular satellite is in view) that will be replaced unnecessarily. Oops! ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 15:45:44 -0400 (EDT) From: msb_at_private (Mark Brader) Subject: Risks of unilingual vacation-reply messages The council of Swansea, Wales, decided to have a certain road posted "No entry for heavy goods vehicles. Residential site only". Official road signs in Wales today must be in Welsh as well as English, so the English text was emailed to the council's translation office. And in due course a sign was erected with text in Welsh -- whose meaning was: "I am not in the office at the moment. Please send any work to be translated." See <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/7702913.stm>. (Note incidentally the comment in the article to the effect that they should have consulted an expert. Well, that's what they *were* doing -- the real problem was that a person who translates things into a certain language has no business having a vacation notice that's only in that language. In other words, the failure notice failed to be identifiable as out-of-band.) This all reminds me of the restaurant in Beijing whose name in English is apparently signposted as "Translate Server Error". (Pictures of it have been circulating on the Internet for a while, but I don't know if they are genuine.) [Also noted by Peter Zilahy Ingerman. PGN] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 22:29:43 -0400 From: Monty Solomon <monty_at_private> Subject: US court throws out most software patents, John Oram John Oram, Microsoft has a problem, *IT Examiner*, 31 Oct 2008 Much of the patent portfolio of some of the world's biggest software companies has become worthless overnight, thanks to a ruling yesterday by the US patent court. The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) in Washington DC has decided that in the future, instead of automatically granting a patent for a business practice, there will be a specific testing procedure to determine how patentable is that process. The decision is a nearly complete reversal of the court's controversial State Street Bank judgment of 1998, which started the stampede for patenting business practices. http://www.itexaminer.com/us-court-throws-out-most-software-patents.aspx http://www.groklaw.net/pdf/07-1130.pdf ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 26 Oct 2008 11:18:33 -0700 From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren_at_private> Subject: Beware: T-Mobile's Voicemail Paging Trap Beware: T-Mobile's Voicemail Paging Trap http://lauren.vortex.com/archive/000448.html Greetings. Longtime users of T-Mobile may already be familiar with this issue that I'm about to describe, but with many persons now moving to T-Mobile from AT&T to get hold of the Google Android G1 phone, lots of these new subscribers may be in for a disappointing surprise, especially if you use your phone for business purposes and rely on a clear and concise outgoing voicemail announcement. One of the basic rules of human interface design is that you don't want to ever offer callers options that don't actually work as described. T-Mobile violates this concept big time for the overwhelming majority of calls into their voicemail system, and in a manner that could have potentially very serious results. The problem is essentially simple. All callers who hear your personalized voicemail outgoing message are then offered the opportunity to send a numeric page ("press 5"). Unfortunately, this paging prompt is presented to everyone hearing your voicemail message, *even when you have paging turned off* -- which is in fact the default state. This is more than an annoyance to callers who sit through additional verbiage waiting for a beep, it can result in misunderstandings and worse: "I entered my number for a page -- I needed to reach you right away! Why the blazes didn't you call back?" "Oh, I have paging turned off." "Then why the hell did the system offer me a page and have me waste my time entering my call back number? Who designed that blasted thing? The Three Stooges?" Actually, that's unfair to Larry, Moe, and Curly -- I'm sure they could have done a better job of voicemail system design than T-Mobile's vendor. This isn't rocket science. Don't jerk callers around telling them that they can page and then put them through the motions of entering call back numbers in a useless exercise reminiscent of the Mad Tea Party from "Alice in Wonderland," especially since we can be sure that only a tiny percentage of subscribers ever actually want to use paging at all. It's notable that AT&T Mobility does this right. You can always configure an AT&T cellular line so that if paging is off, there is no prompting for paging call backs. In fact, AT&T's cellular voicemail system can be configured just to play your outgoing message and beep without any prompting verbiage at all being added onto the end -- which is the ideal situation in most cases. It's incredible for T-Mobile to operate a voicemail system that makes it impossible for them to avoid confusing callers with false prompting options and actions that are at best ineffectual -- and can easily lead to serious problems indeed when assumed paging actions never actually take place. Achtung T-Mobile! You pride yourself on your customer service. But this behavior of your voicemail is sloppy, consumer-unfriendly, and in some situations perhaps even dangerous. You can do much better. Lauren Weinstein, +1 (818) 225-2800 http://www.pfir.org/lauren Co-Founder People For Internet Responsibility - http://www.pfir.org Co-Founder NNSquad Network Neutrality Squad - http://www.nnsquad.org http://lauren.vortex.com lauren@private or lauren@private ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 4 Nov 2008 12:44:47 -0000 From: "Mike Tibbetts" <Mike.Tibbetts_at_private> Subject: Re: BBC Domesday Project (Leeson, RISKS-21.93) By chance I came across PGN's list of risks "Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology" (http://www.csl.sri.com/neumann/illustrative.html) on the Internet and found a reference to the BBC Domesday Project and the public reports that the Laservision discs produced in the 1980s were no longer readable and so the data is lost. As have other commentators, Nick Leeson cites this as another example of the risks to the public interest in the use of computer technology. I'd like to put the record straight - about the BBC Domesday Project, at least. I was one of the two people who conceived the BBC Domesday Project which began in 1984 and completed in the Autumn of 1986. I was in overall charge of its practical realisation. I do not intend any criticism of you or any of the other academics who have highlighted our project as an example of lack of foresight but I have been repeatedly stung by such criticisms because, in fact, nothing could be further from the truth. However, it is not my personal pique which is the important issue here but the fact that dismissing us as unthinking technocrats with no forward vision or sense of national heritage actually masks what I believe to be the real problem about data preservation and of which I think the BBC Domesday Project is indeed a good exemplar, but not as currently presented. At the time we put the Domesday Project together in 1984, we in the BBC did our utmost to ensure that what we were doing could be preserved for the future, irrespective of technological evolutions. From the very first we worked in close collaboration with the UK National Data Archive which was funded by the UK's Economic and Social Research Council and housed at the University of Essex in East Anglia. The Director of the National Data Archive at that time was Professor Howard Newby, now Vice-Chancellor of Liverpool University. From day one, Professor Newby was one of four senior academics we invited to be on a steering committee which was the main source of guidance on policy and academic rigour for the project. As you probably know, the BBC Domesday Project successfully completed the compilation and publication of two twelve-inch Laservision discs. In a world which still awaited the introduction of usable Wintel PCs, CD-ROM, MP3 audio, M/JPEG video or Internet technology, we had to innovate much of the technology which made our venture possible. We collaborated with Philips to adapt their Laservision technology to allow digital data to be encoded in the stereo soundtrack of their analogue videodisks. We used the BBC Microcomputer which, as a previous collaboration between BBC TV engineers and Acorn Computers, had a 625-line video output and was therefore uniquely conformable with an analogue PAL TV signal. The material on the disks contains a massive collection of material to portray every aspect of the UK in the early 1980s,including 10,000 Ordnance Survey maps, 200,000 photographs, local descriptions and survey returns from an estimated 1 million members of the UK population, hundreds of video clips from the BBC and other media archives, newspaper and magazine front pages, commissioned essays from key experts, the contents of virtually every government department's computer archive statistically re-structured into datasets to provide maximum intercomparability, surrogate journeys through a whole range of environments from council flats to rural farms. All this was catalogued and indexed by a massive system designed and implemented by the then-chairman of the UK Society of Indexers. Enough, already. I could bore for Britain about those two years in the mid-eighties. In sharp contrast to the way we are portrayed now by some commentators, we were always acutely aware of the volatility of the hardware and software we had used to implement the Domesday Project and the need to preserve this unique archive for the future. Knowing that our project was coming to an end we transferred the master tapes and server files for everything we had compiled, including all our working documents and enabling software to ... the National Data Archive under the supervision of Professor Newby. Following the completion of the Domesday Project the BBC attempted to continue the work on interactive media by converting our team into a new unit to be called the Interactive Television Unit and I was offered the position of being its first Editor. However, in common with others, I had come to realise how far ahead of our general time the Domesday Project was and therefore likely to be marginalised within a traditional broadcasting organisation. I moved on from the BBC and a couple of years later the ITU was disbanded. Eighteen or so years later I began to hear about a project instigated by a Northern UK university to "rescue" the Domesday Project data because, as we had always known, our idiosyncratic Philips "LV-ROM" player (of which only about a thousand were ever sold thanks to Philips' exorbitant end-user price) had virtually ceased to exist and copies of the plastic disks were approaching unreadability. I immediately went to the National Data Archive website to assure myself that our original masters had been preserved, only to find no record of them! Although I was not personally involved in the "Camileon" rescue project, I understand that those people also failed to find any trace of the original material in the National Archive and work began to try and re-create methods to retrieve the data from remaining copies of the disks and bits and pieces of resource in personal collections. The rescue in conjunction with the UK National Archives (the old UK Public Records Office and different to the National Data Archive) was partially successful and a reconstruction of the material on one of the two Domesday disks was completed and made available as an online resource. This was the part of the Domesday Project where a large number of local volunteers (including 50% of ALL the primary and secondary schools in the country) collaborated to survey, comment on and photograph their local communities and compile entries for the "Community Disk". This material covered over 100,000 square kilometers of the UK land surface and accounted for over 60% of the populated areas of the UK. I assumed that this web-based reconstruction of the Community Disk would be carefully preserved by the National Archives at Kew in London who had part-funded the reconstruction. But no. I hear that the instigator of the Community Disk rescue project has sadly died and his web-page which used to link through to the web-enabled reconstruction no longer functions. I have asked other members of the original team and no-one seems to know where, if anywhere, this can now be accessed. Neither of the websites of the National Data Archive nor the National Archives contain any reference to substantial holdings of the Domesday Project material, either in its original or reconstructed form. The National Archives only refer to some digi-beta tapes holding some of the imagery from the Community Disks. So, after this extended diatribe, what's my point? Basically that the fault in all this lies not in the lack of vision or foresight by the technologists but that, at least in the UK, the national systems of data preservation and heritage archiving simply don't work reliably or consistently. We lodged our original material with the official national conservators and, so far as I can tell, they seem to have lost it! More importantly the fruits of a major national effort to retrieve some of the material also seems to have disappeared from the public radar after only a year or two, even though relevant national bodies were involved in the reconstruction. Referring to the risks in the title of PGN's list, I respectfully suggest that, for the Domesday Project at least, the risks do not really trace to the use of computers but in the inadequate procedures for effective national curation and conservation of information assets. More importantly, blaming the technocrats shifts the focus away from where, in my opinion, probing questions from authoritative people like yourself might more properly be directed. This e-mail has extended far longer than I intended and I apologise for taking up your time (if you have persisted to the end!). If you care to respond I would be very interested in your thoughts. Mike Tibbetts, 62 Prestonfield, Milngavie, Glasgow G62 7PZ +44 (0)141 570 1782 :mike.tibbetts_at_private ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 2 Nov 2008 11:35:16 -0800 (PST) From: Paul Robinson <rfc1394_at_private> Subject: Re: Treasury Office Faults IRS Computer Security (PGN, RISKS-25.40) > Both systems are gradually being put into use. CADE, expected to cost more > than $1 billion through 2012 to develop and operate, this year processed > about 20 percent of the 142 billion returns filed. 142 Billion pages, would mean a tax return averaging 473 pages each for every man, woman, and child in the U.S. (300 million people). 142 Billion returns, about 20 times the entire world population! 142 Million returns, completely believable. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 2 Nov 2008 19:08:23 -0800 (PST) From: Bruce R Koball <bkoball_at_private> Subject: Computers Freedom & Privacy Conference 2009 - Request For Proposals Request For Proposals, Washington, DC, June 1-4, 2009 The 19th annual Computers, Freedom, and Privacy conference is now accepting proposals for panels, workshop sessions, and other events. CFP is the leading policy conference exploring the impact of the Internet, computers and communications technologies on society. It will be taking place in June 2009, just months into a brand new U.S. administration - an exciting moment in history, as we look into the future and ask, "Where do we go from here?" For more than a decade, CFP has anticipated policy trends and issues and has shaped the public debate on the future of privacy and freedom in an ever more technology-filled world. CFP focuses on topics such as freedom of speech, privacy, intellectual property, cybersecurity, telecommunications, electronic democracy, digital rights and responsibilities, and the future of technologies and their implications. We are requesting proposals and ideas for panels, plenaries, debates, keynote speakers, and other sessions that will address these and related topics and how we can shape public policy and the public debate on these topics as we create the future. We especially encourage proposals that: * Take advantage of our Washington, DC location * Shed light on what we can expect from the new administration * Incorporate a global and international perspective * Focus on the future and what we can expect in the years to come in technology and policy * Include debates or otherwise present challenging points of view * Inform attendees about cutting-edge technologies and issues However, we encourage proposals in all areas. The more complete and fleshed out a proposal, the more likely it will be accepted - but we welcome the submission of all good ideas. To submit a proposal or idea for CFP 2009, please go to http://www.cfp2009.org/submissions/subguide.html Many thanks and we look forward to your ideas and your participation! CFP 2009 co-chairs, Jay Stanley and Cindy Southworth ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2008 11:08:37 -0800 From: Rob Slade <rmslade_at_private> Subject: REVIEW: "Handbook of Research on Technoethics", Luppicini/Adell BKHRTCET.RVW 20081002 "Handbook of Research on Technoethics", Rocci Luppicini/Rebecca Adell, 2009, 978-160566022-6, U$495.00 %E Rocci Luppicini %E Rebecca Adell %C Suite 200 701 E. Chocolate Ave., Hershey, PA 17033-1117 %D 2009 %G 978-160566022-6 %I IRM Press/Idea Group/IGI Global %O U$495.00 800-345-432 717-533-8845 cust_at_idea-group.com %O http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1605660221/robsladesinterne http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1605660221/robsladesinte-21 %O http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/1605660221/robsladesin03-20 %O Audience n Tech 1 Writing 1 (see revfaq.htm for explanation) %P 1028 p. (2 volumes) %T "Handbook of Research on Technoethics" The (very brief) preface states that the work is for students, instructors, researchers, ethicists, technology scholars, and just about everybody. Unfortunately, all it has to say about the topic is that it is broad. Ultimately, this is a compendium of papers related to ethics related to technology (sometimes). Even in the more detailed attempt to define technoethics, in the first article, the authors have to admit that there is little agreement on the term: that some see it as the special responsibility of technologists and engineers, while others extend it to behavioural standards for the new global community. A "conceptual map" of the topic is presented at one point. In some attempt to be cute the topics are overlaid on a map of Europe, but the specific subjects are laid out in almost random fashion, primarily covering computer ethics and related ideas, but extending somewhat into biomedical areas. (One of the more interesting papers examines the ethics of performance enhancement technologies in sports.) The essays are divided into broad categories: theoretical frameworks, areas of research, case studies, emerging trends, and further reading. The titles of the sections do little to differentiate the contents of the pieces. In the section on theoretical frameworks, for example, one paper describes Lawrence Kohlberg's theory of moral development, while another briefly notes John Rawls' theory of social justice: the other five essays are generic introductions to ethics in technical arenas. (The article looking at Kohlberg is merely an overview of his philosophy, without any real relation to technology. Similarly, a later treatise is simply an explanation of podcasting, without any relevance to ethics at all.) There does not appear to have been any attempt to structure topics in advance, but rather to attempt to arbitrarily impose some kind of organization after the fact. Therefore, while some of the treatises are detailed and well written, most are vague and simplistic. There are different examples and focus in various papers, but there is an enormous amount of duplicate content, particularly in terms of basic concepts. The range of examples might be interesting or useful for broad discussions of ethics in a technical environment. However, it is hard to imagine an audience that would benefit from this work, rather than a number of others that would be more valuable at less cost (even when considered in total). Deborah Johnson's "Computer Ethics" (cf. BKCMPETH.RVW) is limited to information technology, true, but it is more complete in that field. Herman Tavani's "Ethics and Technology" (cf. BKETHTCH.RVW) is more structured and foundational. The addition of a decent text on bioethics would equal or exceed the content of these volumes, and be easier on the pocketbook. (Or is it immoral to contemplate such base considerations?) copyright Robert M. Slade, 2008 BKHRTCET.RVW 20081002 rslade_at_private slade_at_private rslade_at_private victoria.tc.ca/techrev/rms.htm blogs.securiteam.com/index.php/archives/author/p1/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 29 May 2008 07:53:46 -0900 From: RISKS-request_at_private Subject: Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks) The ACM RISKS Forum is a MODERATED digest, with Usenet equivalent comp.risks. => SUBSCRIPTIONS: PLEASE read RISKS as a newsgroup (comp.risks or equivalent) if possible and convenient for you. The mailman Web interface can be used directly to subscribe and unsubscribe: http://lists.csl.sri.com/mailman/listinfo/risks Alternatively, to subscribe or unsubscribe via e-mail to mailman your FROM: address, send a message to risks-request_at_private containing only the one-word text subscribe or unsubscribe. You may also specify a different receiving address: subscribe address= ... . 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Lindsay has also added to the Newcastle catless site a palmtop version of the most recent RISKS issue and a WAP version that works for many but not all telephones: http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/w/r <http://the.wiretapped.net/security/info/textfiles/risks-digest/> . ==> PGN's comprehensive historical Illustrative Risks summary of one liners: <http://www.csl.sri.com/illustrative.html> for browsing, <http://www.csl.sri.com/illustrative.pdf> or .ps for printing ==> Special Offer to Join ACM for readers of the ACM RISKS Forum: <http://www.acm.org/joinacm1> ------------------------------ End of RISKS-FORUM Digest 25.44 ************************Received on Sat Nov 08 2008 - 16:01:56 PST
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