Karen Watters Cole wrote:
> Does anyone want to comment on the theory, suggested by Arthur�s colleague,
> that the blackout originating in Ohio was caused by a disabled computer,
> infected by a virus or worm, thus unable to respond in an emergency
> situation;

The renowned German computer magazine c't suggested that the power outage
in N.America was caused by the W32.Blaster worm that still rages thru
unpatched Windoze systems:

The Niagara powerplant (where the outage started) belongs to the
National Grid USA (http://www.nationalgridus.com), a customer of
Northern Dynamics (http://www.opcexperts.com).  The powerplant's
control system uses OPC ("OLE for Process Control") based on
Micro$oft's COM/DCOM model.  This includes exactly the security loophole
that the W32.Blaster worm exploits.  The frequent reboots caused
by the worm are blocking the DCOM communication and thus OPC on
unpatched systems, as in the powerplants' SCADA systems (Supervisory
Control and Data Acquisition).

(article in German: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/data/ju-15.08.03-001/ )


> or do we just want to speculate that this power crisis was deliberately
> triggered to make political points specifically to the advantage of the
> electricity industry and its political friends crafting Energy policy;

Why should it be to their advantage?  It has put them in the defensive
(see subject line of this thread).  It rather seems that  IF it was
deliberately triggered, then by the Democrats, in preparation of the
presidential election campaign 2004 (along the lines of
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=434764 ).


> or that the Bush2 administration needed something to divert world attention
> from the California recall, the poor economy and globocop occupation news
> arriving daily from Iraq?

Then why didn't Dubya blame it on terrorists?


> On a more serious note, hopefully, we should see more interest in new
> materials and innovations to improve both capacity and reliability of
> existing lines that won�t require as much new construction, grossly enrich
> the electricity lobby and/or activate NIMBY.

Absolutely.  I liked Rifkin's proposal at
http://www.guardian.co.uk/renewable/Story/0,2763,1021569,00.html


>  Efforts to push through a
> jumbo energy package on the heels of a utility crisis will resemble the
> forced passage of the USA Patriot Act after 9/11. - KWC

The big difference is that the measures of the Patridiot Act are in the
vested interest of Dubya's corporate backers and friends (� la Carlyle)
whereas the opposite applies to a good solution of the utility crisis.

Chris



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