This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0515bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Love is just a
four-letter word
By Scott
Bradner
Network World, 05/15/00
It's
spring and love is in the air - and in a lot of computers. But much of this
love is a bug rather than a feature, and this love bug is no Disney movie. It's
closer in feeling to the title of an old Dylan song. The whole thing is made
more ironic because it is the result of software that's trying to be too
helpful.
Most weeks it's hard to figure out what to write about. I
frequently go into Sunday morning with no idea, but this week it's easy. Any
time a columnist gets confronted with a story that news people say may amount
to $10 billion in damage because of some silly design decisions, there is no
question that the right topic has presented itself. Even in these days of
Cisco-led stratospheric acquisition evaluations, $10 billion would be real
money if it were a real cost. It's not. It's just news media hyperbole, but it
does grab people's attention.
It would be one thing if this new
LoveLetter virus were the first example of a supposedly helpful feature in
Microsoft software being used by some antisocial individual to impact a big
chunk of corporate America (and corporate elsewhere). But this is far from the
first time. There seems to be a new Microsoft Word virus every few days and a
new Exchange virus every week.
Microsoft's answer to the question of
"Why is it so easy to do this sort of thing?" is that the firm added
features users want. I may not know all Microsoft Word or Exchange users, but I
suspect few have requested that Microsoft add virus vulnerability to the
repertoire of features.
I will say that the level of default
helpfulness in programs such as Microsoft Word is quite annoying. Even more
annoying is that it is very laborious to disable most of the features. For
example, I have yet to find a way to permanently kill the dancing paper clip or
to tell it that I want plain text without any smiley faces or typesetting
quotation marks. For this user, the most helpful feature would be a helpfulness
control panel.
The root enabler for most of the recent virus attacks
is the fact that Microsoft and other vendors enable a lot of things by default
that would be far better disabled - things like the ability to click on an
e-mail attachment to execute it. The majority of users would do just fine with
this function turned off and be limited to opening Word, Excel and a few other
office application files. To enable more than that by default is to facilitate
what has happened.
Disclaimer: Some would say that Harvard has
facilitated history, but it has no opinion on helpfulness, so the above is my
frustration.
All contents copyright 1995-2002 Network World, Inc.
http://www.nwfusion.com