[Asterisk-Users] Re: Advice on OS Choice
Michael Giagnocavo
mgg-digium at atrevido.net
Fri Oct 15 14:12:44 MST 2004
Yea... good old days. Well, with the new "idiot-proofness-required" society
we're seeing, we can just forget about that...
I wouldn't be surprised if a company was held responsible for releasing the
code, even if the hospital tech loaded the code on a toaster and tried to
use THAT as a medical device (But XYZcorp gave us the code!). Very sad
actually.
-Michael
-----Original Message-----
From: asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com
[mailto:asterisk-users-bounces at lists.digium.com] On Behalf Of Andrew
Kohlsmith
Sent: Friday, October 15, 2004 2:57 PM
To: asterisk-users at lists.digium.com
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Re: Advice on OS Choice
On Friday 15 October 2004 16:22, Michael Giagnocavo wrote:
> >problem lies in the policy for upgrading or installing software on
> >life-critical machines not being followed.
> I agree with that. But, what's going to be held up in court? As a lawyer
> for a medical equipment corp, which route are you going to take to be
safe?
As a medical equipment corp system designer (I do this for a living,
although
not for medical) I'd make damn sure the software couldn't be updated without
the correct access codes being in place, including hardware interlocks with
physical keys. It's not hard to make firmware loaders require this kind of
stuff.
> Imagine a toaster that ships with a booklet that shows the schematics and
> shows people how to "rebuild" the toaster. Then some person (either a
> 9-yr-old or an experienced electrician) uses the instructions, and fries
> themselves. Or the next person who uses the toaster starts a fire. When it
> gets to court, you can bet that the lawyers are going to try to blame the
> company for "making it easier to modify the toaster". Even though it's
> utterly silly, that's how the US legal system works. No one is responsible
> for their own mistakes.
This used to be the way it was. The Amiga computers all came with full
schematics. Radios and televisions had easily obtainable service manuals.
Radio Shack actually had a decent parts inventory. Hell IIRC certain
versions of DOS (CP/M?) had full source listings!
*sigh* good old days...
-A.
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