Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Approaching a new decade

In two days time, we will enter a new decade. Many people have forgotten what was the big issue at the end of the last decade. It was the so called Y2K bug that never occurred. During the last two years of that decade, management consultants went round to spread the panic that if the Y2K bug was not fixed, computer systems around the world would collapse. This would happen not only to commercial systems but to military systems as well.

Several hundred millions, perhaps more, were paid in consultancy fees to fix the perceived Y2K problem. It frightened top management of big organisations, financial regulators and political leaders. It was a boom time for management and I.T. consultants who had the expertise to fix this imaginary problem. It reminded me of the fairy tale by Hans Christian Anderson told to children, about the emperor's imaginary new clothes.

I was one of very few who dared to argued that nothing would possibly happen and that the Y2K panic was exaggerated. I reasoned with I.T. experts and top accountants, but they argued back more strongly about the potential disasters that could happen. I concluded that they were extremely stupid or dishonest. As they were talented people, I concluded that it must be dishonesty, as they had pocketed large profits from providing the consultancy to fix the problem.

There were hundreds of millions of computers, big or small, around the world that needed to be fixed. Not all of them could be fixed in time and to the specification required by the consultants. It would be reasonable to expect several millions of them, which were not properly fixed, to fail with disastrous consequences. None of the failures occurred. All the computers continued to work fine on the turn of the century.

Companies that spent tens of millions to fix the Y2K problem gave a collective sigh of relief and congratulated their people for averting the disaster. Those who realised that they were conned by the scam of the century were too embarrassed to bring up the issue. This matter was best forgotten, which was what happened quickly.

The following decade brought about its own scams, in the form of the technology bubble, corporate scandals, housing bubble, financial innovation, derivatives, CDOs, CDS and the like. They made super wealth to the "talented" people but the rest of the world that much poorer.

What scams will the next decade bring?

Tan Kin Lian

4 comments:

Parka said...

This article reminds me immediately of the EZ Link card needing an upgrade.

Unknown said...

In the next decade, I predict the following scams unsettling the people:

1) 2012 doom day;
(completely rubbish stuff)

2) Oil/gold banking;
(to reserve land/sea for future discovery of precious materials)

3) Need for 4G, 5G or higher mobile communication technology.
(who is using 3G video-to-video telephone call now ? completely useless function in my mobile phone now)

4) Need for higher internet speed for residential home.
(the current speed serves very well for intensive video online now)

5) banking innovation : in asking people to take out money from their saving account into investment products.

Cardin Lee said...

I'm a [hobbyist] computer programmer, and the Y2K scam is as much a result of the programmers' own laziness.

Like the article you pointed out said, some programmers never bothered to check for the first two digits of the year.

What made the problem dangerous, is also human error. Some programmers are not sure whether their applications are vulnerable or not. This is because many applications are not built from the ground up, but rather make use of other people's foundation programs.

Therein lies the problem. Programmers are unsure whether the foundation program they're relying on is protected against such a vulnerability, since they are not the ones who made it. [And programmers don't like to reveal their source code to others.]

Of course, it's also a simple issue to fix, if one is committed enough. Just purchase an upgrade to your software!

The only scam here is that the IT professionals overcharge for their fees, or they had no idea what they were doing.

Ghim Moh Resident said...

Hi Mr Tan,

I think the next decade is from 2011 to 2020. Hence we have 1 more year to the end of this decade.

Its hard to think of what scams will the next decade bring.

I just hope for peace and prosperity to all Singaporeans.

Blog Archive