This newsletter is intended for people and companies interested in disaster recovery and is only sent to people who subscribe. Back issues are archived on our Web site (http://www.binomial.com). Sometimes, the emailed newsletter is truncated by your server because of its length. This current issue is now available at http://www.binomial.com.
Each month, we search through over thousands of articles to find information on disaster recovery planning, business continuity planning, and more.
ANYONE CAN CONTRIBUTE, JUST SEND SNIPPETS TO: letter@binomial.com
In this Issue:
Last week, in San Diego, my niece was driving to the airport in the evening when another care pulled alongside and a passenger in that car fired six shots into my niece's car. She was unhurt and luckily alone in the car. The two kids' seats in the back were pretty shot up. It made me think about how fast fortunes can change. If she was one of your employees and the results had been less fortunate, your plan better provide for the loss of an employee/team member.
Tonight, I received a call from a company, also in San Diego, that had just been hit with some computer nastiness, which they think is a virus. None of the software they have will fix it. I suggested they call the Disaster Recovery Journal ( www.drj.com ) and the Disaster Resource Guide ( www.disaster-resource.com/ ) looking for references to companies that can help. Once again, this is an incident that happens so quickly and brings you to your knees. Be prepared.
The year 2000 is ending as it began, with a DDoS attack threatening a large part of the Internet. And more of the same is expected in 2001. A DDoS attack is a distributed denial of service. The latest reported DDoS occurred last week in Denmark where hackers gained control of more than 50 zombine servers and were preparing an assault on the country's systems. A 17-year-old was arrested. Also last week:
A DoS can work like this:
During 2000, this method caused interruptions for such notables as Yahoo, HMV Canada (music retailer), Amazon.com, CNN.com, Buy.com, eBay online, E*Trade, ZDNet. The programs used can disguise the source of the attack and don't leave a trail.
There are still penalties. In the U.S., a first offence is punishable by up to FIVE YEARS in prison and a fine of $250,000.
Current viruses to watch for include: Navidad, Bymer worm, Trinity Version 3, Kakworm, and Forgotten.A .
References:eWeek, Maclean's Business
Damage to one of the world's busiest Internet cables created chaos for millions of people in Australia, Asia and Europe. The SEA-ME-WE 3 cable which links the three continents was damaged on the sea floor about 100 kilometres from Singapore.
Telstra Australia's biggest Internet service provider with more than 650,000 customers relies on the cable for 60 per cent of its traffic. Hundreds of other Australian ISPs also use it. The gridlock was the biggest Internet problem Australia had seen.
At the height of the problem, Telstra's Internet was working at just over 30 per cent capacity meaning that about two-thirds of its users had slow access, or could not be connected.
The 39,000-kilometre SEA-ME-WE 3, which only began operating last year, is the world's longest telecommunications system. It has 40 landing points in 34 countries on four continents, stretching from western Europe (including Germany, Britain and France) to the Far East (including China, Japan and Singapore), to Australia. Its bundle of superfine optical fibres can transfer 20 gigabits of information a second the equivalent of about 5,000 medium-length novels, 500,000 simultaneous telephone chats or a million pages of email. About 100 telecommunications companies around the world including Telstra are partners in the $1.7 billion project.
To help colleges and universities limit future property and economic damage due to natural disasters, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has launched a Disaster Resistant Universities initiative. The program provides about $100,000, to be matched equally by the receiving institution, to enable universities to assess their vulnerabilities to natural hazards and to implement strategies to limit damage before disasters occur. Five campuses have been selected as initial participants: Tulane University, the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, the University of Miami, the University of North Carolina-Wilmington, and the University of Washington-Seattle.
The Disaster Resistant Universities initiative will encourage these new participants to identify risks and undertake preventive actions at the local level, establish public-private partnerships, and encourage long-term efforts and investments in risk reduction. For more information, contact FEMA, Mitigation Directorate, Project Impact, 500 C Street, S.W., Washington, DC. 20472; and/or see: http://www.fema.gov/nwz00/nwz00_56.htm
http://www.animaldisasters.com a resource for professional emergency managers and animal care providers who have an interest in improving the care of animals and their owners in disasters.
http://disaster.ifas.ufl.edu The Disaster Handbook
http://www.udel.edu/DRC pubs of the Disaster Research Center (DRC) at the University of Delaware
http://www.disasterlinks.net links to disaster Web sites
http://www.eclacpos.org/sustdev/CARLINKS/dislink.htm Caribbean links
http://www.crh.noaa.gov/pub/ltg/crh_colo_ltg_res_center.html
Colorado Lightning Resource Center Web
We have scheduled several new dr seminars
(Business & Disaster Continuity Planning) will be in
Come and learn how to be ready for all disasters.
Attendees at all of our seminars learn all about dr, receive a full, registered version of our world-renown software system, Phoenix 2000b and each develop a disaster recovery plan for their own company. All attendees can also attend any future seminar for a small fee. The schedule and seminar content can be seen at www.binomial.com. Still a few seats left.
The results of a year-long, survey in the U.K.
We have been noticing that it is getting harder to train recovery team members. Pressures of production work often prevent adequate time for training. We recommend that you review (and rewrite where necessary) your plans to allow for intelligent but untrained team members when the disaster occurs. Be realistic. If your people won't train, then you have to modify your plan to allow for this.
We are pleased to announce the release of Phoenix 2000b, the latest version of our disaster recovery planning software system. A working demo version of this system is available for free download from http://www.binomial.com and upgrading to this version is free for all current customers. Send us an email requesting your upgrade.
This version of Phoenix has integrated the procedures and databases modules. The procedures module contains much more material that earlier versions. Phoenix can now be produced in many languages. Take a look and tell us what you think. Feedback is always welcome.
You will find links to DRP sites of interest at: Links
Over 800 links are now listed here.
Interesting links may be found at: www.fema.gov/fema/whatsnew.html
Also check www.colorado.edu/hazards/sites/sites.html
Also check www.colorado.edu/hazards/dr/currentdr.html
The IT manager at a testing lab loses his night-shift data processing analyst, but boss puts the kibosh on hiring a replacement.
So, for the next 18 months, fish reports for work himself at 4 a.m., "so reports can be on all the engineers' desks at 8 a.m."
Come annual review time, the manager's review stinks. What's the problem? he asks his boss. Boss hems and haws, then finally says, "You've been seen leaving for lunch and not returning. A lot."
"Do you have any idea what time I get to work?" the manager asks.
Boss admits he doesn't, so the manager has him call in the gate guard, who shows the boss the security log. There's the manager, in at 4 a.m. every morning.
Boss is indignant. "How long has this been going on? Why wasn't I told?"
A flight certificate was issued this week to Kris Kringle, dba Santa Claus, for an eight-reindeer sleigh and praised Santa's remarkable 100-percent on-time record. A safety inspection of the sleigh revealed no maintenance problems, and a computer search failed to uncover any Airworthiness Directives that might affect the aircraft's return to service. And, as ever, the folks at NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command) will be tracking Santa's progress live on the Internet starting on Christmas Eve.
Check out BINOMIAL Business/Disaster Recovery Planning Seminars
We have moved all of the events information to Events to save space in your email.
letter@binomial.com
EVENTS
SEMINAR DATES & LOCATIONS
MINNEAPOLIS
January
29-31
2001
TEXAS
April
2001
WASHINGTON
May
14-16
2001
CHICAGO
June
2001
ORLANDO
September
2001
LAS VEGAS
October
2001
PASADENA
November
2001
Note that we never let anyone have access to this newsletter's subscriber list, EVER.
www.binomial.com
BINOMIAL (800) 361-8398(V) (520) 441-4170(F)