Trend Micro customers suffer weekend mayhem

By Dan Ilett, Special to ZDNet
26 April 2005 08:10 AM
Tags: sp2, patch, xp, trend, micro, critical, trend micro, gene
Trend Micro apologised on Monday for distributing a faulty software update that caused IT workers around the world to spend the weekend fixing their systems.

The Japan-based antivirus company has promised to compensate customers whose computers running Windows XP SP2 were disabled by the update. The company said the update was only available for ninety minutes and caused "certain performance issues" with CPUs, but IT managers are furious.

"This damn update took down virtually all 1,500 of our Windows XP SP2 PCs and required many hours of work to resolve," said one angry reader in an e-mail sent to ZDNet. "The machines were rendered inoperable once this signature hit, and required many of us to work through Friday night. Our entire IT staff had to come in on Saturday to attempt to fix this disaster."

"How in the world could Trend [Micro] release a signature file that disables all Windows XP SP2 machines? Why didn't [they] test this signature before it got released? I cannot believe that Trend Micro has no XP SP2 machines to test on before they release patches, and if they don't they better get some ASAP. If this happens again, I can assure you that we will be finding a new antivirus vendor for our organisation," he added.

A second reader reported that every one of his company's 250 desktops had to be visited by a technician and repaired after being hit by the problem.

Trend Micro, which denied rumours that the update included a virus, said it didn't know what had caused the incident but that it had now issued a fix and was working with channel partners to solve the problem.

"We apologise to the people and we are willing to compensate them for the extra work they had to do their machines," said Raimund Genes, president of Trend Micro for Europe. "It's a pattern file that we made a mistake on. I would say this is an isolated incident, but we have to figure out why it wasn't caught by the quality assurance."

A Trend Micro spokeswoman later said that compensation claims would be assessed "on a case by case basis".

Genes said that most of the businesses affected were located in Japan, and that few complaints had been received from customers in the US and Europe.

Investors of the company have been informed, but Genes said the incident could affect share prices.

"I just talked to the [chief financial officer]. Of course it has an impact on stock today. We haven't decided what kind of compensation we will offer."

The update affected versions 7.5 and above of Trend Micro's Scan Engine. The company said it changed a decompression algorithm in the update file to combat a rise in the number of viruses that recruit PCs for bot nets.

ZDNet UK's Dan Ilett reported from London. For more coverage from ZDNet UK, click here.

Advertisement

Talkback 3 comments

    OK the focus is on "Corpo ...Anonymous -- 26/04/05

    OK the focus is on "Corporate" users but home users were more dramatically hit. How many home users know how to reboot in "safe mode" and then have the intelligence to research the long trusted "Trend" software as a potential culprit.

    trend has won over many users by providing a simple and high quality service - how can they recover their users trust. Two days later and no apology received by this registered user.

    Trend - get your act together and talk to your loyal user base.

    Yeah, and if this was Microsof ...Anonymous -- 27/04/05

    Yeah, and if this was Microsoft nobody would care...

    I am one of those users whose ...Anonymous -- 27/04/05

    I am one of those users whose system has crashed. Interesting that Trend Micro has not offered a solution, just compensation which I will be seeking. I feel sorry for those that had multiple computers as I feel the only fix for me is to reformat the hard drive and start again.

Add your opinion

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Phil Dobbie Is wholesale-only backhaul just a pipedream?
    The potential acquisition of Pipe Networks by SP Telemedia has raised the question about whether vertically integrated backhaul providers will mean higher wholesale prices for ISP customers.
  • Array Get extensions going in Firefox, redux
    Previously on Null Pointer we looked at getting extensions working in Firefox betas, and that was great until the fine folks at Firefox changed their minds.
  • Array How reliable is IP telephony?
    Have you ever heard a weird kind of hissing, crackling or popping noise when calling someone on an IP telephony line? How rare is the phenomenon these days?
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured