Terminal Compromise - Winn Schwartau (fiction book recommendations TXT) 📗
- Author: Winn Schwartau
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points taking on Pierre Troubleaux. He was too popular.
“Thank you, Senator, I am glad you asked. I was just getting
there.” Pierre’s sugary treatment was an appropriate slap in
Rickfield’s face.
“Please continue.” The Senator had difficulty saying the word
‘please’.
“Yes sir. So, the prognostications made over a decade ago by the
likes of Steve Jobs, that computers would alter the way we play,
work and think have been completely fulfilled. Now, if we look
at those years, we see a multi-billion dollar industry that has
made extraordinary promises to the world of business. Computer-
ize they say! Modernize! Get with the times! Make your opera-
tion efficient! Stay ahead of the competition! And we listened
and we bought.
“With a projected life cycle of between only three and five
years, technology progresses that fast, once computerized, forev-
er computerized. To keep up with the competitive Jones’, main-
taining technical advantages requires upgrading to subsequent
generations of computers. The computer salespeople told us to
run our businesses on computers, send out Social Security checks
by computer, replace typewriters with word processors and bank at
home. Yet, somewhere in the heady days of phenomenal growth
during the early 1980’s, someone forgot. Someone, or more than
likely most of Silicon Valley forgot, that people were putting
their trust in these machines and we gave them no reason to. I
include myself and my firm among the guilty.
“Very simply, we have built a culture, an economic base, the
largest GNP in the world on a system of inter-connected comput-
ers. We have placed the wealths of our nations, the backbone of
the fabric of our way of life, we have placed our trust in com-
puters that do not warrant that trust. It is incredible to me
that major financial institutions do not protect their computer
assets as well as they protect their cash on hand.
“I find it unbelievable that the computers responsible in part
for the defense of this country appear to have more open doors
than a thousand churches on Sunday. It is incomprehensible to me
that privacy, one of the founding principles of this nation, has
been ignored during the information revolution. The massive data
bases that contain vast amounts of personal data on us all have
been amply shown to be not worthy of trust. All it takes is a
home computer and elbow grease and you, or I, or he,” Pierre
pointed at various people seated around the room, “can have a
field day and change anybody’s life history. What happens if the
computer disagrees with you then?
“It staggers the imagination that we have not attempted any
coherent strategy to protect the lifeblood of our society. That,
ladies and gentlemen is a crime. We spend $3 trillion on weapons
in one decade, yet we do not have the foresight to protect our
computers? It is a crime of indifference by business leaders. A
crime against common sense by Congress who passes laws and then
refuses to fund their enactment. Staggeringly idiotic. Pardon
me.” Pierre drained the water from his glass as the tension in
the hearing room thickened.
“We live the paradox of simultaneously distrusting computers and
being required to trust them and live with them. We are all
criminals in this disgrace. Maybe dGraph more than most. Permit
me to explain my involvement.” The electricity in the room
crackled and the novice CNN producer instructed the cameraman to
get it right.
“Troubleaux!” A man’s gruff accented voice elongated the sylla-
bles as he shouted from the balcony in the rear. A thousands
eyes jerked to the source of the sound up above. Troubleaux
himself turned in his seat to see a middle aged dark man, wearing
a turban, pointing a handgun in his direction. Scott saw the
weapon and wondered which politician was the target. Who was too
pro-Israel this week? He immediately thought of Rickfield. No,
he didn’t have a commitment either way. He only rode the wave of
popular sentiment.
Pierre too, wondered who was the target of a madman’s suicide
attack. It had to be suicide, there was no escape.
Scott’s mind raced through a thousand thoughts during that first
tenth of a second, not the endless minutes he later remembered.
In the next split second, Scott realized, more accurately he
knew, that Pierre was the target. The would-be victim.
As the first report from the handgun echoed through the cavernous
chamber Scott was mid-leap at Pierre. Hell of a way to grab an
exclusive, he thought. He fell into Pierre as the second shot
exploded. Scott painfully caught the edge of the chair with his
shoulder while pushing Pierre over sideways. They crumpled into
a heap on the floor when the third shot fired.
Scott glanced up at the turbanned man vehemently mouthing words
to an invisible entity skyward. The din from the panic in the
room made it impossible to hear. Still brandishing the pistol,
the assailant began to take aim again, at Scott and Pierre.
Scott attempted to wiggle free from the tangle of Pierre’s limbs
and the chairs around them. He struggled to extricate himself
but found it impossible.
A fourth shot discharged. Scott cringed, awaiting the worst but
instead heard the bullet ricochet off a metal object above him.
Scott’s adrenal relief was punctuated by a loud and heavy sigh.
He noticed that the assailant’s shooting arm had been knocked
upwards by a quick moving Capital policeman who violently threw
himself at the turbanned man so hard that they both careened
forward to the edge of the balcony. The policeman grabbed onto a
bench which kept him from plummeting twenty feet below. His
target was hurtled over the edge and landed prone on two wooden
chairs which collapsed under the force. The shooting stopped.
Scott groaned from discomfort and pain as he slowly began to pull
away from Pierre. Then he noticed the blood. A lot of blood.
He looked down at himself to see that his white pullover shirt,
the one with Mickey Mouse instead of an alligator over the breast
pocket, was wet with red. As was his jacket. His left hand had
been on the floor, in a pool of blood that was oozing out of the
back of Pierre’s head. Scott tried to consciously control his
physical revulsion to the body beneath him and the overwhelming
urge to regurgitate.
Then Pierre’s body moved. His chest heaved heavily and Scott
pulled himself away completely. Pierre had been hit with at
least two bullets, one exiting from the front of his chest and
one stripping away a piece of skull exposing the brain. Grue-
some.
“He’s alive! Get a doctor!” Scott shouted. He lifted himself up
to see over the tables. The mad shuffle to the exits continued.
No one seemed to pay attention.
“Hey! Is there a doctor in the house?”
Scott looked down at Pierre and touched the veins in his neck.
They were pulsing, but not with all of life’s vigor. “Hey,”
Scott said quietly, “you’re gonna be all right. We got a doctor
coming. Don’t worry. Just hang in there.” Scott lied, but 40
years of movies and television had preprogrammed the sentiments.
“Drtppheeough . . .” Scott heard Pierre gurgle.
“What? What did you say?” Scott leaned his ear down closer to
Pierre’s mouth.
“DGOEROUGH.”
“Take it easy,” Scott said to comfort the badly injured Pierre
Troubleaux.
“Nooo . . .” Pierre’s limp body made a futile attempt at move-
ment. Scott held him back.
“Hey, Pierre . . .you don’t mind if I call you Pierre?” Scott
adapted a mock French accent.
“Noo, DNGRAAAAPHJG . . .”
“Good. Why don’t you just lay back and wait. The doctor’ll be
here in a second . . .”
“Sick . . .” Pierre managed to get out one word.
“Sick? Sick? Yeah, yeah, you’re sick,” Scott agreed sympathet-
ically.
“DGRAF, sick.” The effort caused Pierre to pant quickly.
“Dgraf, sick? What does that mean?” Scott asked.
“Sick. DGraph sick.” Pierre’s voice began to fade. “Sick. Don’t
use it. Don’t use . . .”
“What do you mean don’t use it? DGraph? Hey!” Scott lightly
shook Pierre. “You still with us? C’mon, what’d you say? Tell
me again? Sick?”
Pierre’s body was still.
*The bullshit put out by the Government was beyond belief, thought
Miles. How could they sit there and claim that all was well? It
was common knowledge that computer security was dismal at best
throughout both the civilian and military agencies. With the
years he spent at NSA he knew that security was a political
compromise and not a fiscal or technical reality. And these guys
lied through their teeth. Oh, well, he thought, that would all
change soon.
The report issued by the National Research Council in November of
1990 concurred with Miles’ assessment. Security in the govern-
ment was a disaster, a laughable travesty if
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