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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!ox-prg!bowen
- From: bowen@prg.ox.ac.uk (Jonathan Bowen)
- Newsgroups: comp.software-eng,uk.misc
- Subject: Bugs and bytes bedevil those paying by plastic
- Message-ID: <4270@inca.comlab.ox.ac.uk>
- Date: 13 Aug 92 09:13:02 GMT
- Sender: news@comlab.ox.ac.uk
- Reply-To: Jonathan.Bowen@prg.oxford.ac.uk (Jonathan Bowen)
- Organization: Programming Research Group, Oxford University, UK
- Lines: 111
-
- Software bugs can nowadays very easily affect millions of people as
- more and more activities associated with our everyday lives are
- computerized. For example, a large number of people now own credit
- cards that are processed by a relatively small number of computer
- centres. Changing these systems can cause unforeseen errors, and this
- has recently happened in the UK. Most of yesterday's UK newspapers
- covered this story and I enclose some extracts below. In fact, it
- appears that not many of those how could potentially have been affected
- have actually been inconvenienced in this case, but who knows next
- time?
-
- The above subject title was enough to tempt me to ask one of our
- secretaries (she wasn't busy - she was reading "news" at the time! :-)
- to type in some of the following article on page 6 of the August 12
- 1992 edition of the UK Financial Times:
-
- Bugs and bytes bedevil those paying by plastic
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- David Barchard, Andrew Jack and Alan Cane on the damage
- done to the credit card industry by a software glitch
-
- WHEN first Data Resources introduced new computer software
- systems on July 17, it could not have foreseen that a
- consequence would be to attract unwelcome publicity to the
- credit card processing industry.
- The company handles the payment card operations of National
- Westminster, Midland and Lloyds banks [three of the largest
- banks in the UK], as well as Royal Bank of Scotland. The
- result is that the change in software affected some 10m
- accounts. A glitch caused mistakes in some card statements and
- yesterday the banks were having to reassure customers that the
- bugs had been resolved with only a few accounts affected.
- Credit card processing is a low-profile industry, and until
- recently it was not even a market in which participants competed
- for business.
- The eyes of FDR and several other companies are now on the
- European card market, which is expected to grow steadily as card
- usage increases and transaction volumes approach levels in the
- mature US market.
- FDR's computer system, introduced from its parent in the US,
- was intended to enhance its card processing operations at
- Southend and Basildon in Essex [southern England]. The
- operations, bought from the Access banks last year, made FDR, a
- subsidiary of the American Express group, the largest credit
- card processor in Europe.
- [...]
- NatWest refused to discuss the technology involved, saying it
- was matter between the bank and FDR. The troubles seem to lie,
- however, in the accounting and reconciliation ("back office")
- software, which is used to manage the card transactions and pass
- information to the banks' main computers.
- Mr Gary Tobin, a senior vice-president of First Data
- Corporation, the parent of FDR, emphasised that errors unrelated
- to the company's equipment might be responsible for some of the
- complaints over credit cards. He said only a few hundred errors
- had been recorded, a small total when converting some 10m
- customer records from one computer system to another.
- He said the conversion was necessary because Signet, the card
- processing company acquired by FDR last year, which had been
- responsible for card processing in Southend, was using
- 20-year-old software that lacked up-to-date facilities or
- security. The new software was developed in the US and
- "anglicised" for UK use. Preparation took a year and involved
- 100,000 programming hours.
- The entire customer list was transferred to the new system over
- one weekend in July, he said. It would not have been possible
- to run the old and new systems in parallel because of the cost
- of providing duplicate hardware.
- Old computer systems are notoriously difficult to manage and
- maintain because they will have been patched and modified over
- the years.
- [...]
-
-
- The Independent (a UK "quality" newspaper) put it more boringly on
- page 4:
-
- Customers urged to check credit bills
- -------------------------------------
-
- by Maria Scott
-
- THE CONSUMERS' Association yester urged customers of some
- of the country's largest credit card issuers to check their
- statements carefully and refuse to pay incorrect bills
- after it emerged that there had been difficulties with one
- of the major computer systems processing card
- transactions.
- [...]
- National Westminster [one of the "big four" banks in the UK]
- said that the main errors affecting the bank's 4.75
- million Visa and Access card holders involved incorrect
- dates being attributed to debits on statements.
-
-
- The August 11 ITN (Independent Television News) 10 o'clock main evening
- news was rather more sensationalist, showing a short clip of someone on
- the phone complaining about an unexplained debit of over 4000 pounds
- sterling (c $7,500) entry on his account. Surely this must have been a
- set-up!
-
- The extracts above are reproduced without permission. My in-line
- comments are in square brackets.
-
- --
- Jonathan Bowen, Oxford University, a Midland VISA card owner.
-
- --
- Jonathan Bowen, <Jonathan.Bowen@comlab.ox.ac.uk>
- Oxford University Computing Laboratory.
-