Japan declares victory in effort to end government use of floppy disks
Japan declares victory in effort to end government use of floppy disks

Japan declares victory in effort to end government use of floppy disks

Crossposted from !worldnews@lemmit.online
The comment section is wild. So many people thinking that the Japanese government is somehow late to the floppy free party. Clearly they have no idea how dire the IT infrastructure situation is for the most critical systems of the world's major super powers
If you think the US government is floppy free, let alone capable of going floppy free in the next 5 years, I've got a bridge to sell ya
Not only because the infra is bad but also because floppy is "safer". It's not "connected"amd no one can invade it.
Security by obscurity
Where are floppies used in the US government? Old mainframes are all over the place but where are floppies?
Japan just got an acute case of what a lot of western governments have - IT early adopter disease. These old systems were built using (at the time) revolutionary technology that was designed without much thought given to modularity or sun-setting.
Iirc literally the nuclear launch systems? I'll see if I can find the article.
Edit: not anymore, but as recent as about 2019ish. Can't imagine they're the only ancient infrastructure still using this level of technology though. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/24/us/nuclear-weapons-floppy-disks.html
https://www.wired.com/story/san-francisco-muni-trains-floppy-disks/
I'm not sure about government but I am aware of test equipment in commercial aerospace that still use floppy disks, soooo.....
Its been a while since I used one but arent 3.5's unreliable? I still remember having problems with data integrity way back then. I dont remember them as some rock solid tech and I'd rather put my faith into 650MB CDs if I had to choose.
3.5 inch disks only held about 2MB on a good day. Reliable or not, you won't get much on that disk these days.
Unless you are going to make your own backups and take them somewhere else, I would use a cloud solution. Yes, you have to trust the company you choose not to fuck with your data, but they are fault-tolerant solutions that will likely last longer than some random removable solution.
Granted I'm too young to have handed floppys but from what I understand from my dad and other people the appeal of floppys today is not reliability but rather that normal people have moved on to USB and CDs and have long since thrown away their floppy drives and some people only know them as icon buttons making them pretty good spot to hide classified documents and government secrets
I somehow wouldn't be surprised if certain parts of the US government still used reel to reel tapes.
Meanwhile I'm pretty sure even putinism didn't stop Russia from being floppy-free
it would be pretty hilarious if sanctions push them to ditching floppies