Software Update Shuts Down Nuclear Power Plant
Garabito writes "Hatch Nuclear Power Plant near Baxley, Georgia was forced into a 48-hour emergency shutdown when a computer on the plant's business network was rebooted after an engineer installed a software update. The Washington Post reports, 'The computer in question was used to monitor chemical and diagnostic data from one of the facility's primary control systems, and the software update was designed to synchronize data on both systems. According to a report filed with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, when the updated computer rebooted, it reset the data on the control system, causing safety systems to errantly interpret the lack of data as a drop in water reservoirs that cool the plant's radioactive nuclear fuel rods. As a result, automated safety systems at the plant triggered a shutdown.' Personally, I don't think letting devices on a critical control system accept data values from the business network is a good idea."
Must restart reactor to complete software installation.
[Yes] [No] [OMFG!]
Adds a whole new meaning to "Critical Update".
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
"Vent radioactive gas? Venting gas prevents explosion. [Yes / No]"
Took this comment seriously, did you?
It says right in the EULA that it's not to be used in a nuclear power plant!
jX [ Make everything as simple as possible, but no simpler. - Einstein ]
If it was running Windows the OS is at fault.
If it was running something else then the application was at fault.
Good enough evidence for me! Microsoft caused a nuclear meltdown! Quickly, to the Blogo-Sphere!