The following text is copyright 2000 by Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as attribution is given and this notice is included.
Too efficient
communications
By Scott Bradner
If someone wanted to
create a demonstration of a number of the challenges of getting important
information via the Internet it would have been hard to put together a better
one than the recent episode involving Emulex.
For the chronically
unaware, someone posted a forged press release from Emulex, the self proclaimed
"world's largest supplier of fibre channel adapters," saying that the
Company's CEO had resigned, that its recently reported fourth quarter results
were to be restated from a profit of 25 cents per share to a loss of 15 cents
per share, and that Emulex was under investigation by the Securities and
Exchange Commission. In other words, the release said the company was in very
deep doo doo. The press release was posted on the Internet Wire web and
email-based technology headline service, which I started getting out of the
blue a while back.
The news, which was
quickly picked up by CNBC, Bloomberg, Dow Jones and other financial news
outlets, did not do anything good to Emulex's stock value which proceeded to
drop from $113 To $45 in the hour before trading was halted. The stock
recovered just fine after the hoax was exposed and the stock resumed trading
two hours later. As I write this the FBI has just arrested someone for posting
the press release and pocketing a quarter of a million dollars by selling the
stock short. I wonder how much money was lost by others to produce this return
for the perpetrator.
This was an impressive
demonstration of the speed of today's communications infrastructure - 60% of a
company's net worth wiped out in an hour! It was also an impressive
demonstration of gullibility. For some reason the story apparently went out on
Internet Wire without it being verified with Emulex . Then the other new
services and analysts picked it up without questioning Emulex , the SEC, or the
fact that the news came from a small Internet-based news service rather than
one of the established ones which would be more logical for news of this
importance. I guess it was more important to be first rather than to be
accurate.
The beginning of this
sorry trail is with Internet Wire's running of the story without being positive
that it came from Emulex. But we have had the right digital signature
technology to verify the origin or messages for a number of years. It would not
be all that hard for Internet Wire and the other news services to insist that
all press releases be digitally signed before they will be accepted. The
software is readily available and not all that hard to use. Setting up a public
key infrastructure for this purpose would not be hard and would cost a whole
lost less than this one incident might cost Internet Wire if they were required
to make good the many people who lost money on this. Sad to say that there is
no easy technical solution to gullibility.
disclaimer: One hopes
that gullibility is not a selected for trait at Harvard but sometimes one
wonders. In any case the above observation is mine alone.