McKenzie Wark on Tue, 6 Jun 2000 22:22:37 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Love Buggery |
College hopes to ride its love bug [from the Sydney Morning Herald] http://www.smh.com.au/ The computer college where the "I Love You" virus may have been spawned is trying to decipher whether the outbreak is a public-relations catastrophe, or the breakthrough it needs to get itself listed on Manila's stock exchange. Flipping through a stack of the latest international news magazines is a tired Manuel Abad, the vice-president of AMA Computer College. "Man, that's such a bad shot of the school," he says, pointing to a picture in Newsweek. "It's not even the school, it's all the cigarette vendors outside, with our sign on the wall." Initially, Mr Abad thought that police tracing the virus to a couple of senior students was bad news - so much so that for a week he has been making the rounds of late-night TV talk shows to pump up the school as a hothouse of computer skills. "If this thing [the fastest-moving virus to hit the Internet] came out of AMA, then I can't be proud of it," says Mr Abad. But he does take satisfaction from the school's growth from 13 students in 1979 to 150,000 today. Like waves of merchant seamen, nurses and domestic helpers before them, Filipino computer technicians are making their mark on the world. AMA's training partners include Microsoft, Cisco Systems and Lucent Technologies. The school will soon sign up Hewlett-Packard. All these companies recruit directly from the school, and about a third of its graduates get programming jobs in the US or Europe. In the world's press, though, AMA is better known as "hacker college". Philippines investigators have talked to a number of AMA students as they try to uncover how the virus infected millions of computers worldwide and even sent the e-mail systems of the Pentagon and the British Parliament crashing. Before a crush of television cameras, 23-year-old Onel de Guzman said he may have released the program by accident. Another suspect, classmate Michael Buen, denies any involvement, although police say an earlier virus he allegedly wrote bears a distinct resemblance to the "Love Bug". Mr Buen has now been offered a number of programming jobs, his family says. That positive reaction seems to be shared by many Filipinos. In a telephone survey by a TV show, 7,000 callers said Filipinos should be proud of the virus, 6,000 said they should be ashamed. Even President Joseph Estrada thinks the virus should be used to promote Filipinos' computer skills, according to his trade secretary. Mr Abad and his team are now trying to compile their own survey to see if the publicity really is all that bad. "It's an interesting case study," says Juanito Ramos, the school's business development manager. It also could have a bearing on the success of the public offering, planned for some time in the next couple of years. "We believe AMA should go public, and we believe people will want to invest," says Mr Abad. Dow Jones __________________________________________ "We no longer have roots, we have aerials." http://www.mcs.mq.edu.au/~mwark -- McKenzie Wark # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]