So, Eric — You don’t think Y2K had consequences?
:)

It just happened to be a raft of stupid bugs that the industry dealt with in 
time.
I was coding around Y2K bugs as early as 1979, as were lots of other people, 
just matter of factly planning on Y2K, but some of the older and more primitive 
stuff wasn’t being looked at until the late 1990s, and lots of production lines 
would have gone nuts.

As for how much damage this year's vulnerability will do, yeah, strap in for 
the ride. Hopefully it will help people think about Internet of Things. (Banned 
from my house, as much as possible, but I can’t control my Vizio TV.)

And self-driving cars are going to be scarey, but I’ll need a driver in another 
10 years if I’m still around. I might already be more dangerous behind the 
wheel than a compromised automatic driver . . . . But I agree with Stephen, at 
least they need an air gap between the Internet and the robotic driver.

Even then, some rich kids *will* get kidnapped on the way to school by their 
hacked chauffeur-bots, it’s bound to happen, too obvious. And remember the TV 
series “Extant,” where the top robotics guy was assassinated by the central 
computer which locked him in his car on the railroad track. (I’m sorry, Dave….)
______________________

On 20180105, at 11:27, Eric Oyen <[email protected]> wrote:

oh boy. This sounds like another Y2K problem, only this one has some reality 
about it and real consequences.

-eric
from the central offices of the Technomage Guild, Truth or Consequences Dept.


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