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Opinion: Dare to disconnect with a graceful new Y2K fix
(IDG) -- The anticipated real-world problems associated with Y2K are a lot more complex than a single company collapsing for lack of Y2K compliance. Even if Bank A is fully Y2K-compliant, its operations do not exist in isolation. Bank A must interoperate with Bank B in Hong Kong, Bank C in London and so on; such is the nature of the global economy.
The real problem with Y2K is the Cascade Effect - one company's Y2K problems flowing downstream into other companies' nets. I have met a couple of executives from major financial and industrial firms who have seriously considered the Cascade Effect and how to deal with it. But in general, the prevailing attitude seems to be, "We'll do everything we can reasonably do, and hopefully, have less of a mess to clean up than if we did nothing." This approach is litigation waiting to happen. I suggest that there is a much more sane and common-sense approach than waiting for disaster to arrive: I advocate Graceful Degradation when it comes to Y2K. Twenty or so years ago, we probably could have given up our primitive fax machines and word processors with negligible impact on our businesses. In fact, many of us could have easily reverted to pencil-and-paper alternatives to technology. That is a Graceful Degradation from one business process to another. Today, business is conducted on a network of networks. The Cascade Effect occurs when failure hits one network and the errors compound as they travel from network to network. The AT&T outages are but a few examples of the Cascade Effect that have occurred over the past decade. Now with Y2K, we face the ultimate network-of-networks failure. Graceful Degradation does not have to mean resorting to yellow pads and No. 2 pencils. Today, it could mean something as simple - and survivable - as isolating networks from one another and seeing what happens.
I suggest that we redefine network survivability in the face of Y2K to mean, "a network that can correctly operate in isolation from the networks with which it normally interacts." First, you have to identify the departmental networks that absolutely have to be part of your corporate network. For example, if you disconnect the human resources or finance department networks from the corporate network, how much disruption will occur to your business processes? This is Graceful Degradation; mitigating the possibility of far greater damage by disconnecting networks that could be subject to the Cascade Effect. Politically, disconnecting your networks from one another may be unpopular, but it certainly provides a solution for surviving Y2K. To determine whether your organization is a candidate for Graceful Degradation, answer the following questions:
I don't know much about Y2K coding, but I do know that if we don't test and mitigate the ramifications of the Cascade Effect now, things will be a heck of a lot worse than if we do. Graceful Degradation is one approach. Schwartau is president of InfoWar.Com and chief operating officer of The Security Experts, an information security consulting firm in Seminole, Fla. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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