Terminal Compromise by Winn Schwartau (ebooks children's books free .txt) 📕
FEES
Distribution for up to 100 people on a single network: $ 500 (Includes 1 Year subscription to "Security Insider Report.")
Distribution for up to 1000 people on a single network: $ 3000 (Includes 10 1 Year subscriptions to "Security Insider Report.")
Distribution for up to 2500 people on a single network: $ 6250 (Includes 1 Year electronic Corporate site license to "Security Insider Report.")
Distribution for up to 5000 people on a single network: $ 10000 (Includes 1 Year electronic Corporate site license to "Security Insider Report.")
Distribution for up to 10000 people on a single network: $ 15000 (Includes 1 Year electronic Corporate site license to "Security Insider Report.")
Distribution f
Read free book «Terminal Compromise by Winn Schwartau (ebooks children's books free .txt) 📕» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Winn Schwartau
- Performer: -
Read book online «Terminal Compromise by Winn Schwartau (ebooks children's books free .txt) 📕». Author - Winn Schwartau
police. Jim reported the apparent problem on the air and as many
accidents as he could; there were too many accidents to name. He
passed on the recommendations of the police: Best Stay Home.
By 6:30 two additional helicopters were ordered to monitor the
impending crisis as the city approached real gridlock. Police
helicopters darted about while the media listened in on the
conversations from their police band radios.
At 7:00 the Traffic Commissioner was called at home, and told
that he shouldn’t bother trying to come to work. The streets
were at a standstill. Thousands of extra police units were
dispersed throughout the city in a dubious attempt to begin the
process of managing the snarl that engulfed the city.
Scott Mason exited from the 43rd. Street and Vanderbilt side of
Grand Central Station and was met with a common sight – a massive
traffic jam. He walked the one block to Fifth Avenue and it
gradually dawned on him that traffic wasn’t moving at all. At
8:15 A.M. it shouldn’t be that bad. The intersection at Fifth
was crowded with cars aiming in every direction and pedestrians
nervously slipped in and around the chaos.
Scott walked the three blocks to the Times digesting the effects
of the city’s worst nightmare; the paralysis of the traffic
system. At that thought his stomach felt like he had been thrown
from an airplane. The traffic computers.
* Washington, D.C.Sonja Lindstrom watched the New York based Today show from the
kitchen counter in her upscale Reston, Virginia townhouse. What
a mess, she thought. She knew how bad traffic could be in New
York even when the lights worked. A news flash pre-empted an
interview with Joan Embry from the San Diego Zoo. Sonja watched
intently. New York was entering panic mode, and the repercus-
sions would be world wide. Especially with the banks closed.
The New York radio stations linked up with the Emergency Broad-
cast System so they could communicate with the half million
drivers who had nowhere to go. Bridges and tunnels into Manhat-
tan were closed and cars and busses on major arteries were being
forced to exit onto side streets. Schools, shops and non-essen-
tial government services were shut down for the day.
The Governor of New York declared a state of emergency and the
National Guard was called to assist the local police. Sonja
compared New Yorkers’ reactions to this crisis to the way they
deal with a heavy snowfall when the city stops. Pretty much like
any other day. No big deal, go to a bar, good excuse for a
party. She giggled to herself as the phone rang.
“Hello?”
“Good morning, Sonja?”
“Oh, hi, Stephanie. Yeah. Kind of early for you, isn’t it?”
Sonja sipped her coffee.
“It is, I know, but I had to call you,” Stephanie said quickly.
“Something wrong?” Sonja asked.
“I think so, maybe. Wrong enough that I had to tell you.”
Stephanie sighed audibly. “You don’t have to play up to Scott
Mason any more. I’m getting out.”
“Out of what?” Sonja said with confusion.
“I’ve learned a few things that I don’t like, and I’ve kinda got
hung up on Miles, and, well, I feel funny about taking the money
anymore. Especially since Miles doesn’t know about the arrange-
ments. You know what I mean?”
“Yes. With Scott it bothered me a little. So I made believe I
was on the Dating Game. All expense paid date.” Sonja knew
exactly what Stephanie meant. Deep inside she had known that at
one point or another she would have to meet the conflict between
her profession and her feelings straight on and deal with it.
She had not suspected that it would be for passion, nor because
of one of her ‘dates’.
“Besides,” Sonja added, “I didn’t need to push him into anything.
He’s so hung on this story that it’s almost an obsession with
him.”
“That’s good to know, I guess,” Stephanie said vacantly until her
thoughts took form. “Hey, I have an idea. Why don’t the four
of us get together sometime. I’m sure the boys have a lot in
common.”
“Scott should be down tonight.”
“That should be fine. We were going to dinner anyway. Maybe we
can put this behind us.”
* New York CityThe traffic engineers frantically searched for the reason that
the signals had all turned green. They reinitialized the switch-
es and momentarily thousands of green lights flashed red and
yellow, but there was no relief from the gridlock. Computer
technicians rapidly determined that the processor control code
was ‘glitching’, as they so eloquently described the current
disaster. A global error, they admitted, but correctable, in
time. The engineers isolated the switching zones and began
manually loading the software that controlled each region’s
switches in the hope of piecing together the grid.
At noon the engineers and technicians had tied together the
dozens of local switches into the network and watched as they
synchronized with each other. The computers compare the date,
the time, anticipated traffic flow, weather conditions and adjust
the light patterns and sequences accordingly. Twenty minutes
later, just as system wide synchronization was achieved, every
light turned green again. It was then that the engineers knew
that it was only the primary sync-control program which was
corrupted.
The Mayor publicly commended the Traffic Commissioner for getting
the entire traffic light system back in operation by 2:00 P.M..
The official explanation was a massive computer failure, which
was partially true. Privately, though, Gracie Mansion instructed
the police to find out who was responsible for the dangerous
software and they in turn called the Secret Service. The media
congratulated the NYPD, and the population of the City in coping
with the crisis. To everyone’s relief there were no deaths from
the endless stream of traffic accidents, but almost a hundred
were injured seriously enough to be taken to the hospital.
Whoever was responsible would be charged with attempted murder
among other assorted crimes. All they had to do was find him.
* New York CityTelephoning to another day is about as close to time travel as we
will see for a century, but that’s how Scott felt when he called
OSO Industries in Tokyo. Was he calling 17 hours into the next
day, or was he 7 hours and one day behind? All he knew was that
he needed an international clock to figure out when to call Japan
during their business hours. Once he was connected to the OSO
switchboard, he had to pass scrutiny by three different opera-
tors, one of them male, and suffer their terrible indignities to
the English language. He told Homosoto’s secretary, whose Eng-
lish was acceptable, that he was doing a story on dGraph and
needed a few quotes. It must have been slow in Tokyo as he was
patched through almost immediately.
“Yes?”
“Mr. Homosoto?”
“Yes.”
“This is Scott Mason, from the New York City Times. I am calling
from New York. How are you today?”
“Fine, Mr. Mason. How may I help you?” Homosoto was obviously
the gratuitous sort when it came to the press.
“We are preparing to run a story in which Pierre Troubleaux
accuses you of murdering his partner Max Jones. He also says
that dGraph software is infected with destructive programs.
Would you like to comment, sir?” Scott asked as innocently as
possible under the circumstances.
No answer.
“Sir? Mr. Homosoto?”
“Yes?”
“We are also interested in your relationship with Miles Foster.
Mr. Homosoto?”
“I have nothing to say.”
“Are you financing hackers and Arabs to distribute computer
viruses?”
No answer.
“Sir, do you know anything about a blackmail operation in the
United States?”
“I should have killed him.”
“What?” Scott strained his ear.
“Mr. Troubleaux is alive?”
“I can’t answer that. Do you have any comment, sir? On
anything?”
“I have nothing to say. Good day.” The phone went dead.
Guilty as sin. A non-denial denial.
Chapter 25 Saturday, January 16 Tokyo, JapanDressed as business-like on the weekend as during the week, Taki
Homosoto sat at his regal techno-throne overlooking the Tokyo
skyline from his 66th floor vista. It was time. Years of prepa-
ration and millions of dollars later, it was time. Perhaps a
little earlier than he would have liked, but the result would be
the same anyway.
The first call Homosoto made was to Ahmed Shah in his
Comments (0)