New Year’s Eve: Musings on Y2K
At 3pm PST on 31 December, 1999, I sat down at the computer in my home office in Yakima, Washington. I logged remotely into the network at HQ and started monitoring our systems. The most critical moment would come at 4pm local time. We were in Pacific Standard Time (PST), -0800 UTC. In other words, at 4pm in Yakima, it would be midnight in Greenwich, England, where the time zone aligns with Coordinated Universal Time. (Coordinated Universal Time is abbreviated as UTC, not CUT, because there are actually other languages in the world besides English, and… never mind. Look it up if that story interests you).

Anyway.

The GPS satellites run on UTC, and our entire multi-state operation depended on GPS timing. My first hint of system failure because of a Y2K bug would occur at midnight, UTC.

Beginning at 3:55pm I began testing the major system once a minute. At 4:05pm I sent out the notice to corporate management that all was well.

I tested hourly, then, but the next critical moment wasn’t until 9pm PST, which was when midnight occurred on the US East Coast. Our equipment was all in MST and PST, but some of our many telecom providers might have systems with local time coordination in some other US time zone. (They’d all be using GPS now, but – this was 1999, and US telecommunications had plenty of legacy systems with other clocking methods).

In the end, nothing failed. Our entire system worked.

This wasn’t because Y2K was overblown.

It was because we replaced our billing system, which wasn’t able to generate an invoice after the date flip.

It was because we did software updates on several proprietary systems that would have failed.

It was because we did firmware updates, too.

Equipment inventories.
Application inventories.
Operating system inventories.
Software version inventories.
Firmware version inventories.

The reason January 1, 2000 seemed like such an ordinary day is because of the MASSIVE amount of work and money spent to make it ordinary. There are unsung heroes around the world who put in the work to update or replace systems that would’ve failed otherwise.

If you’re one of those people, I would love to hear your story.

#newyear #y2k #informationsecurity #gps

@fifonetworks

That's a great read, thank you. The Y2K meltdown didn't happen because institutions spotted the issue in good time and did the work.

It's so annoying to see people treat the issue as a "hype".

We observe developments that, if unchannelled, will culminate in a catastrophic event. We take action to alter these developments. If the event then does not happen, we have succeeded. There was no hype --- there was foresight paired with preventative action.

@the_roamer @fifonetworks Yes. The ‘over-hype’ reaction to Y2K is akin to the antivax one: because we don’t see lots of measles, mumps, rubella, etc, the vaccines we are given are unnecessary.

@Gaolaitch

Exactly!

@the_roamer @Gaolaitch It is akin to lots and lots of denialisms. Like, there never was an ozone-hole problem, when in reality it was recognized as a serious threat, and addressed.
With 'luck', climate change will rudely remind us that recognizing and addressing such threats is not a luxury. In fact, it is already doing so.
@JohnMashey
U.S. Cyber Command operation disrupted Internet access of Russian troll factory on day of 2018 midterms

Some senators credit more-aggressive U.S. tactics with averting Russian interference in the elections.

The Washington Post

@martinvermeer @the_roamer @Gaolaitch @JohnMashey

I sometimes wonder at what point did Republican billionaire donors explicitly stop being on the side of democracy.

For #KochNetwork, I believe it was the Clinton-Era EPA fines.
https://www.epa.gov/archive/epapages/newsroom_archive/newsreleases/981d17e5ab07246f8525686500621079.html

I'm not including Tory billionaire donors because the British upper classes & their allied monarchic despots in the Middle East have always been opposed to democracy.

And especially taxation of their wealth in the post-WW2 period.

@Npars01

I dunno, grampa Koch was pretty nuts

@Npars01 once you have that amount of money, it's probably quite flattering to yourself (at least to a large chunk of humans who amassed that much money) to start considering the rest of your human brethren as ants to be squashed and democracy as something you don't care about because these stupid ants don't know anything anyway