A critical software flaw in the navigation systems of 12 F-22 Raptors during their first international mission highlights the severe consequences of inadequate risk mitigation and the importance of ethical, thorough software development practices.
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On their inaugural international mission, 12 of the Navy’s F-22 Raptors worth $150
million each, were on their way to Okinawa -- the first test of a $66 billion project.
The jets performed flawlessly until crossing the international dateline, at which point
all 12 experienced catastrophic failure of the navigation software when all of the systems,
including navigation, fuel, altitude gauges, and communications experienced the computer
equivalent of the blue screen of death.
The issue was a failure to program the international dateline into the jet software.
While many software development projects have far less at stake, it is critical that stakeholders
work hard to address and mitigate risks that could threaten the success of any project.
With so much potential for human error in software development, it’s important that
developers commit to ethical development practices.
While one standardized code of ethics could be a solution for the software industry, information
service professionals need to know how to ask the right questions when considering the
ramifications of emerging software and technology.
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