Bringing E-Com Sites Down for Y2K?
dlb asks: "With Jan 1, 2000 just days away, the large wholesaler that employs me made the decision to disconnect our e-com web site from the rest of the 'Net. This was a heated debate for the past two months in the upper ranks between the paranoid and those who believe that bringing the site down manually is no different than some external entity creating the DoS for us (not to mention the loss of sales). For the other IT Professionals out there, are your companies bringing their sites offline this weekend? Why or why not?" Well, I guess if you are going to buy the hype, it's better safe than sorry, right?
There are essentially two kinds of IS managers: those with a solid computer science background, and the other kind. To the other kind, computers are magic, programmers perform an un-understandable task, and what could happen is infinite because they have no rational means of assessing risk. They cover up the fact that they don't understand the computers by using buzzwords and keeping current with all of the trade rags so that they seem to be on top of trends.
If your site can hold up on the average day, it should have no problem this weekend. There will not be a reign of terror by computer criminals (oh yes, if your IS manager calls them "hackers", that's another sign he's not a computer science pro). There will not be unforseen bugs from outside your site that damage you, and if you haven't fixed the inside bugs, well, some dates will be wrong. Big deal. Your backup tapes will not be magically erased on the very shelves where they lie.
My sites will be up tonight.
Bruce Perens
Bruce Perens.