Tag Archive for Disaster recovery

Every Phone and TV in the US Will Blackout

Every Phone and TV in the US Will BlackoutA blackout will affect every phone and TV in the US on October 4, 2023. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will conduct a test, causing a blackout for every phone and TV in the US. The Feds will conduct a nationwide test of the Wireless Emergency Alerts and Emergency Alert System on October 4th. This test will temporarily blackout all consumer cell phones, and also be sent to radio and TV stations.

nationwide testThe blackout will test the Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) and the Emergency Alert System (EAS). Both tests are scheduled to begin at approximately 2:20 PM ET on Wednesday, October 4th. The October 4th test aims to ensure that the systems remain effective for warning the public about emergencies, especially at the national level.

Wireless Emergency Alerts

The Wireless Emergency Alerts test be will directed. FEMA will send a code to all cell phones, and the test message will display in either English or Spanish, depending on the language settings of the wireless handset. The WEA test will be initiated using FEMA’s Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS), a centralized internet-based system administered by FEMA that enables authorities to send authenticated emergency messages to the public through multiple communications networks.

Wireless Emergency AlertThe message will be sent at approximately 2:20 PM. Cell towers will broadcast the test for approximately 30 minutes. All wireless phones should receive the message only once. Consumers will see the message on their phones, which will read…


“THIS IS A TEST of the National Wireless Emergency Alert System. No action is needed.”

Emergency Alert System

Emergency Alert SystemThe Emergency Alert System test will also take place 2:20PM on October 4. The one minute EAS alert will be sent to radios and televisions. The alert message will be similar to the regular monthly EAS test messages that we are familiar with.


“This is a nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System, issued by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. “

If they need to postpone the October 4th test due to widespread severe weather or other significant events the back-up testing date is October 11.

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Will the MAGA Republican government shutdown impact this test? I guess will see….

How you can help Ukraine!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Black Hole Data

Black Hole Data The first image of a black hole was published on April 10, 2019. The black hole, M87* at the center of the Messier 87 galaxy is located 53 million light-years away from Earth. NASA says a black hole is an extremely dense object from which no light can escape. Anything that comes within a black hole’s “event horizon,” will be consumed, because of the black hole’s unimaginably strong gravity.

the first image of a black hole

By its very nature, a black hole cannot be seen, the bright ring in the picture is the event horizon, the point where an object approaching a black hole is unable to escape its gravitational pull. Objects that pass into the event horizon go through spaghettification, a process, first described by Stephen Hawking, where gravitational forces stretch the object out like a piece of pasta. The M87* image shows a silhouette of the black hole against the glow of the event horizon captured by researchers at the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT).

APEX Atacama Pathfinder Experiment antenna.The EHT is the brainchild of Shep Doeleman, the director of EHT and astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. It is a virtual global array of eight ground-based radio telescopes. The EHT captured around 3.5 PB of data for the black hole image in April 2017. It then took two years to correlate the data to form the image. The EHT team not only had to figure out intergalactic science but also massive information technology problems. The researchers had to solve IT problems pretty typical for enterprise IT professionals, only bigger.

According to an article at SearchDataBackup each EHT telescope can record data at a rate of 64 Gbps, and each observation period can last more than 10 hours. The author calculated that each site generated around half a petabyte of data per run. The distributed locations included volcanoes in Hawaii and Mexico, mountains in Arizona and the Spanish Sierra Nevada, the Chilean Atacama Desert, and Antarctica. The sites were kept in sync using precise atomic clocks and GPS systems to carefully time the observations.

The data from each telescope was recorded at 16 Gbps and distributed among a total of 32 hard disk drives grouped into 4 modules of 8 disks each. The EHT can record a total rate at each site of 64 Gbps by using 4 units in tandem.

Sites making up the virtual Event Horizon Telescope.

 

One problem EHT ran into was the failure rate of traditional hard drives in the extreme telescope locations. ComputerWorld reports that 28 of 32 conventional hard drives failed at the Sierra Negra telescope, on the top of an extinct volcano in Mexico.

WD 10TB helium disk driveSearchDataBackup says the solution was helium hard drives. The hermetically sealed helium drives are self-contained environments, so they could survive the extreme environments in which EHT’s telescopes operated. EHT first deployed helium hard drives in 2015. EHT data scientist Lindy Blackburn told SearchDataBackup that EHT now uses about 1,000 helium drives with up to 10 TB of capacity from Western Digital, Seagate, and Toshiba. He told SearchDataBackup,

The move to helium-sealed drives was a major advancement for the EHT … Not only do they perform well at altitude and run cooler, but there have been very few failures over the years. For example, no drives failed during the EHT’s 2017 observing campaign.

The amount of data collected by EHT was too much to send over the Internet so the researchers went old-school and used FedEx sneakernet style to send the data to be processed. Geoffrey Bower an astronomer in Hawaii told ScienceNews that mailing the disks is always a little nerve-wracking. So far, there have been no major shipping mishaps. But the cost and logistics involved with tracking and maintaining a multi-petabyte disk inventory is also challenging. Therefore, EHT is always on the lookout for another method to move petabyte-scale data.

Cloud computing

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 SearchDataBackup points out that normally the cloud would be a good option for long-term storage of unifying data sourced from multiple, globally distributed endpoints. However, Mr. Blackburn told them the cloud was not a cold storage option for the project. He said the high recording speed and the sheer volume of data captured made it impractical to upload to a cloud. He explained, “At the moment, parallel recording to massive banks of hard drives, then physically shipping those drives somewhere is still the most practical solution.”

The data collected on the helium hard disk drive packs were processed by a grid computer made of about 800 CPUs all connected through a 40Gbps network at the MIT Haystack Observatory MA, and the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Germany.

Katie Bouman is the MIT student who developed the algorithm that pieced together the data from the EHT with disk drives

Geoff Crew, co-leader of the EHT correlation working group at Haystack Observatory told SearchDataBackup It is impractical to use the cloud for computing. Mr. Crew said;

Cloud computing does not make sense today, as the volume of data would be prohibitively expensive to load into the cloud and, once there, might not be physically placed to be efficiently computed.

The EHT scientists built algorithms that converted sparse data into images. They developed a way to cut the number of possible images by sorting out which results were physically plausible and which were wildly unlikely making it less hard to create the images.

The Haystack VLBI Correlator grid computer at the MIT Haystack Observator

Converting sparse data into images matters beyond astronomy. Mr. Blackburn told 538 the problem comes up in other areas as well; it occurs in medical imaging when doctors use MRIs to convert radio waves into pictures of your body. It’s also a key part of self-driving cars, which rely on computer visualization to “see” everything from potholes to people.

data protectionJust like any enterprise, EHT had to find a workable method of data protection. That includes deciding what won’t be protected. EHT has not found a cost-effective way to replicate or protect the raw radio signal data from the telescope sites. However, once the data has been processed and reduced to tens of petabytes it is backed up on-site on several different RAID systems and on Google Cloud Storage. Mr. Crew told SearchDataBackup;

The reduced data is archived and replicated to a number of internal EHT sites for the use of the team, and eventually, it will all be publicly archived. The raw data isn’t saved; we presently do not have any efficient and cost-effective means to back it up.

Mr. Blackburn said the raw data isn’t worth backing up. Because of the complexity of protecting such a large amount of data, it would be simpler to run another observation and gather a new set of data. Mr. Blackburn said; “Backing up original raw data to preserve every bit is not so important.”

Mr. Blackburn said he can’t seriously consider implementing a backup process unless it is “sufficiently straightforward and economical.

Instead, he said he’s looking at where technology might be in the next five or 10 years to find the best method to handle petabyte-scale raw data from the telescopes. Mr. Blackburn told SearchDataBackup;

Right now, it is not clear if that will be continuing to record to hard drives and using special-purpose correlation clusters, recording to hard drives and getting the data as quickly as possible to the cloud, or if SSD or even tape technology will progress to a point to where they are competitive in both cost and speed to hard disks

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The image of the black hole validated Einstein’s general theory of relativity and proves that enterprise-class IT can solve intergalactic problems.

The EHT team had to figure out how to save, move and backup massive quantities of data and of course do more with less. EHT’s Geoff Crew summed up the problem most IT pros have; “Most of our challenges are related to insufficient money, rather than technical hurdles.”

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  • Trolls hijacked a scientist’s image to attack Katie Bouman. They picked the wrong astrophysicist. (MSN)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Chapter 11 Reboot for Sungard AS

Updated 11/18/2022 –  11:11 Systems has completed the acquisition of Sungard Availability Services’  Recovery Services and Sungard AS’ Cloud and Managed Services business’.

Updated 05/08/2019 – Sungard AS emerged from bankruptcy on 05/07/2019. The firm’s turnaround is described as the fastest pre-negotiated restructuring in US corporate history. The result is Sungard AS debtors having taken an $800 million haircut, the recovery service received $100 million of new liquidity from its creditors and a new CEO.

The firm’s new ownership and largest shareholders now include Angelo, Gordon & Co., LP; The Carlyle Group Global Credit; FS Investments and GSO Capital Partners LP.

However, the quick fix did not solve the problems that forced the firm into bankruptcy, as described below.

Data infrastructure and disaster recovery company Sungard Availability Services (AS) announced it was filing for bankruptcy on April 01, 2019. Sungard AS, which helped keep Wall Street running through 9/11, says its customers include 70 percent of Fortune 100 companies. It boasts 90 hardened IT facilities connected by a redundant, dedicated network backbone, along with 18 mobile facilities staged in strategic locations is saddled with hefty debt from its private equity backers.

Sungard ASIn addition to a huge debt load, the once high-flying Pennsylvania-based firm faces falling margins as it struggles with growing competition from cloud rivals amid a shift away from on-premises/co-location backup. These factors forced the firm to seek relief from the courts.

The Sungard AS Chapter 11 plan is expected to be filed in New York during May 2019. The bankruptcy plan reportedly includes a write-off $800 million of the company’s $1.25 billion debt. Chapter 11 protection is a part of the US Bankruptcy Code that allows a company to reorganize its assets while handing over the business operations of the company to its debtors.

Sungard AS locations

Under the Chapter 11 proposal, hedge fund creditors that specialize in turnarounds and liquidations, sometimes dubbed “vulture capitalists” — including Blackstone Group’s LP’s GSO debt investment unit, Angelo Gordon & Co., Carlisle Group, and Contrarian Capital Management — will take control of Sungard Availability.

The hedge fund will replace the buyout investors who bought the formerly publicly traded company for $11.4 billion in 2005. The original private equity sponsors include: — Bain Capital, Blackstone Group, Providence Equity Partners, KKR & Co., Silver Lake Management, and Texas Pacific Group (TPG) Capital.

Wall Street street signDespite claims that most creditors back the bankruptcy plan and that Sungard AS would emerge from the wreckage a stronger, more competitive business, the move rocked the industry. Hedge funds are not typically long-term investors causing alarm among SunGard AS employees about the company’s future. Employees fear the company will be asset-stripped and not survive, as hedge funds seek to recoup money lost on the debt haircut. Sungard AS insists that won’t happen. Sungard employs over 3,000 people according to its website.

Sungard AS’s data center model, “shared infrastructure,” of physical locations for backup IT systems, has become outdated as cloud-based infrastructure, led by Amazon Web Services, and Microsoft Azure have grown to dominate firms’ IT backup operations.

Andrew A. Stern, Chief Executive Officer, Sungard Availability Services said.

There’s no question the shift to cloud is part of what’s challenged us. But even before the cloud, by the late 2000s, “the approach the company had taken to disaster recovery really hadn’t changed in 20 years — and the world had moved on. … We had been slow in recognizing the business had to change.

Data center issuesSungard initially tried to meet rival remote-server “cloud”-based systems with its own “private cloud” solutions. But its large corporate clients by 2016 were migrating to the large, secure cloud systems maintained by Amazon, Microsoft, and other giant companies. CEO Stern added, “We suddenly found ourselves competing with much bigger environments at much greater scale.

Sungard couldn’t beat them, so it signed up as one of 130 Amazon-audited managed service partners, recruiting and customizing Amazon Web Services for corporate disaster-recovery customers, including, most recently, government agencies in England. Mr. Stern added, “But that change has taken time.

Philly.com summarizes Sungard’s history. Sungard’s lineage starts in the mainframe days. It started off as Sun Information Systems, founded in the 1970s as a backup for early data systems at oil and chemical plants run by the former Sun Oil Co. In the 1980s, founder John Ryan diversified the company, offering backup services to banks as they computerized deposit, loan, and investment records. In the tech boom of the late 1990s, publicly-traded SunGard Data Systems was worth more than Sun Oil’s parent company, Sunoco.

During this time SunGard Data acquired competing systems in the same market sector and let them continue competing for a time. In the late 1990s then-chief executive, Cristobal Conde began combining SunGard products into large groups focusing on recovery (Availability) and was using its profits to buy dozens of financial, government, and college software services across Europe and Asia, and North America.

The 2005 acquisition of SunGard Data by the buyout firms was one of the biggest deals of its kind before the 2008 financial crisis. In 2011 sales peaked at over $5 billion and employment topped 20,000.

Mainframe computerBut with its owners mostly concerned with pulling cash out of the company, it lost what its leaders admitted was a “tsunami” of corporate customer cancellations as the disaster-recovery market changed, and the company didn’t keep up. In 2011, SunGard Data sold its main college business to Virginia-based Ellucian for $1.75 billion.

In 2014 SunGard Data split in two. In 2015 the larger SunGard Data Systems Inc., with sales of $2.8 billion was sold for $5.1 billion to Florida-based Fidelity Information Services. As a standalone unit, Sungard AS struggled to gain profitability leading to the bankruptcy announcement.

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Indeed the Cloud has significantly changed disaster recovery in multiple ways.

The hyperscale cloud providers like AWS and Microsoft Azure have entered the market as both competitors and partners.

Cloud disaster recovery has changed the way disaster recovery services are delivered adding flexibility and remote working.

We have seen the same thing with the demise of KMart and Sears. Sungard was still reliant on brick-and-mortar DR services.

Let’s see how many Sungard AS customers will continue to invest the DR dollars into a company whose CEO admits they “hadn’t changed in 20 years” and is willing to write off almost a billion dollars.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

How Sharks are Taking a Bite Out of the Internet

Sharks Attacking InternetPoliticians in Washington D.C. think that the Internet is made of tubes. Most other people think the modern Internet is made of cell phones and wireless connections. They have no idea of how the Intertubes works. Readers of Bach Seat know that undersea cables cross the globe connecting the continents. Despite a century of development cables are still subject to the same threats the first transatlantic cables faced in 1900.

The Internet remains a relatively fragile thing according to Catchpoint. They report that the Internet can be brought down by as a little as an old woman with a hacksaw. Squirrels and bears have been known to wreak havoc with fiber optic cables as well.

The article says that Internet users in Vietnam have recently been suffering through slow and intermittent connections for months now without any explanation of the cause. The cause was not a government tapping the underwater fiber, it was just a dangerous – SHARKS.

 

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Internet of Things Full of Holes

Internet of Things Full of HolesThe Internet of Things, is big and heading towards huge. The Internet of Things (IoT) is a system where unique identifiers are assigned to objects, animals, or people. These “Things” then transfer data over a network without requiring human-to-human or human-to-computer interaction. Whatis.com says IoT evolved from the convergence of wireless technologies, micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS), and the Internet.

Business Insider believes that the IoT will be the biggest thing since sliced bread. They claim there are 1.9 billion IoT devices today, and 9 billion by 2018, which roughly equal to the number of smartphones, smart TVs, tablets, wearable computers, and PCs combined. Gartner (IT) predicts that there will be 26 billion IoT devices by 2020. Based on a recent article in InfoSecurity Magazine is a very scary thing.

BI Global IOT Installed Devie projectionsThe InfoSecurity article says HP (HPQ) found 70% of the most common IoT devices have security vulnerabilities. HP used its Fortify On Demand testing service to uncover security flaws. HP detected flaws in IoT devices like TVs, webcams, home thermostats, remote power outlets, sprinkler controllers, hubs for controlling multiple devices, door locks, home alarms, scales, and garage door openers as well as their cloud and mobile app elements according to the new study.

HP tested IoT devicesHP then tested them with manual and automated tools and assessed their security rating according to the vendor neutral OWASP Internet of Things Top 10 list of vulnerability areas. The author concludes that the results raised significant concerns about user privacy and the potential for attackers to exploit the devices and their cloud and app elements. Some of the results are:

  • A total of 250 security concerns were uncovered across all tested devices, which boils down to 25 on average per device,
  • 90% of devices collected at least one piece of personal information via the device, the cloud, or its mobile application,
  • 80% of devices studied allowed weak passwords like 1234 opening the door for WiFi-sniffing hackers,
  • 80% raised privacy concerns about the sheer amount of personal data being collected,
  • 70% of the devices analyzed failed to use encryption for communicating with the Internet and local network,
  • 60% had cross-site scripting or other flaws in their web interface vulnerable to a range of issues such as the Heartbleed SSL vulnerability, persistent XSS (cross-site scripting), poor session management and weak default credentials,
  • 60% didn’t use encryption when downloading software updates.

Mike Armistead, VP & General Manager, HP Fortify, explained that IoT opens avenues for attackers.

IoT opens avenues for the attackers.While the Internet of Things will connect and unify countless objects and systems, it also presents a significant challenge in fending off the adversary given the expanded attack surface … With the continued adoption of connected devices, it is more important than ever to build security into these products from the beginning to disrupt the adversary and avoid exposing consumers to serious threats.

HP urged device manufacturers to eliminate the “lower hanging fruit” of common vulnerabilities. They recommend manufacturers, “Implement security … so that security is automatically baked in to your product … Updates to your product’s software are extremely important.”

Antti Tikkanen, director of security response at F-Secure, told InfoSecurity said the problems HP uncovered in this report were just the tip of the iceberg for IoT security risks.

One problem that I see is that while people may be used to taking care of the security of their computers, they are used to having their toaster ‘just work’ and would not think of making sure the software is up-to-date and the firewall is configured correctly … At the same time, the criminals will definitely find ways to monetize the vulnerabilities. Your television may be mining for Bitcoins sooner than you think, and ransomware in your home automation system sounds surprisingly efficient for the bad guys.

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I covered the threats that IoT or “smart” devices presented back in 2012. I don’t know where HP (or the rest of the security community) has been.

The current generation of “smart” devices does not seem to have any security. Most likely the manufacturer did not consider basic security or worse calculated it was better to ignore the secure design in their rush to gain market share.

It is also annoying that HP did not reveal the details on the products they tested.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.