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IBM Australia Government IT

IBM To Pay More Than $30 Million in Compensation For Census Fail (abc.net.au) 60

IBM will pay more than $30 million in compensation for its role in the bungled census, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has indicated. From a report: The Prime Minister described the four Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks that caused a 40-hour outage inconveniencing millions of Australians as "utterly predictable, utterly foreseeable." "I have to say -- and I'm not trying to protect anyone here at all -- but overwhelmingly the failure was IBM's and they have acknowledged that, they have paid up and they should have," he said. "They were being paid big money to deliver a particular service and they failed."
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IBM To Pay More Than $30 Million in Compensation For Census Fail

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  • Sigh (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @11:30AM (#53359793) Homepage

    How to make next year's census even more expensive, no matter who supplies it.

    Lesson 1.

    • Re:Sigh (Score:4, Insightful)

      by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @12:06PM (#53359961)

      How to make next year's census even more expensive, no matter who supplies it.

      Lesson 1.

      Aside from the fact that the census is not run every year, I'm pretty sure that screwing up a census is going to cost a government way more than this fine. $30 million is chump change in comparison to national budgets.

    • How to make next year's census even more expensive, no matter who supplies it.

      Not at all. This was a legal contract and both parties were held to the required performance of the contract. This has nothing to do with the cost of the census other than maybe next time the contractor should actually deliver an easy solution (seriously WTF, IBM has cloud infrastructure which could have delivered this census problem free and off the shelf) rather than pork barrelling.

  • by GrumpySteen ( 1250194 ) on Friday November 25, 2016 @11:44AM (#53359849)

    The Prime Minister said "This was not a particularly clever attack or some great international assault on the census, this was a series of common or garden, utterly predictable, utterly foreseeable denial of service attacks."

    After a decade of fear mongering by US politicians who want to relate every goddamn thing that happens online to a terrorist attack, that is such a refreshingly honest statement that I find myself envying Australia.

  • The service contract for the concentration camp management systems was paid directly to Armonk, NY

    • by Anonymous Coward

      My dad worked for IBM, long after their involvement in selling the business equipment that would be used in the concentration camps.

      He's dead now, and I find it odd that people want to punish the company for something that happened before he worked there, even now that he's been dead for 30 years.

      Move on. If you want to rail against IBM for something, there's plenty of stuff that's happened in the last 20 years. The importance in remembering the past is to not repeat it, not to hold people accountable for

  • I suppose I should be thankful that it wasn't reported as an "epic fail", but can we ditch the idiotic meme of using fail as a noun and go back to using failure?
    • by wjcofkc ( 964165 )
      Because English is a static language. It never changes a bit and has always been so and so it shall be. Right?
      • Because English is a static language. It never changes a bit and has always been so and so it shall be. Right?

        Ãæt is sÃÃlic, wit Ãearf welhwilc prohÃrof mæÃelword

  • IBM is going to do, in round two, what they should have done in round one.

    Systems are not complete until the hardening is done.

    That won't happen as long as there are no significant consequences.

    Litigation and publication are the proper responses for DDoS and hacks.

  • After they completely botched two major projects in Australian states they were blacklisted from government contracts in those states, ... then they win a contract for the federal government and botch that up too?

    How about they deliver something that works at all before there's any talk of them getting a taxpayer dime again.

    • Not going to happen as long as corporations fund 99% politicians election campaigns. Though i don't have a cue how its funded in Australia.
    • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

      I'm personally acquainted with one of the managers from IBM (at the time) in Queensland - she told me that the government signed off every stage of the Health Dept payroll contract. Also, the court case determined that it was the middle-upper management in the Health Dept that were largely to blame for the bungled system. They didn't do the legwork required to make sure the system was properly specced.

      As much as I'm disappointed in what IBM has become in the last couple of decades, banning them from governm

      • Quite possibly. However there is an element of performance expected in contracts. The fact that someone can sign it away doesn't excuse the sheer amount of money that was given to IBM in exchange for what ultimately was nothing.

        What would the result have been if the government didn't sign off? More billable hours?

      • It looks like [smh.com.au] IBM won wrt to the QLD Health Dept. payroll debacle and there is talk about sacking the bureaucrats involved.

        However, part of the point of hiring external contractors for this sort of thing is to take advantage of their expertise. If the government failed to 'properly spec' the system, then either IBM failed to provide knowledge, guidance or push-back on a poor design. They they chose to proceed with a design they knew wouldn't work (and if they didn't know, then they deserve even greater crit

  • This happened to IBM once before: http://www.theatlantic.com/tec... [theatlantic.com]

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