
Mahendra Negi, CFO and Eva Chen, CEO
Asahi: Trend Micro antivirus fix wasn't tested before release
PCWorld: Trend Micro: No Compensation for Faulty UpdateAn antivirus software program update that caused widespread computer problems over the weekend was not thoroughly tested prior to its release, maker Trend Micro Inc. admitted Sunday. A bug in the Virus Buster software caused computer operations to loop, causing affected machines to slow down or crash. The glitch paralyzed rail, media and other online networks for hours in Japan on Saturday. After tens of thousands of computers downloaded and installed the upgrade, their operating systems began experiencing the problems. Tokyo-based Trend Micro admitted the faulty update file was distributed worldwide from its virus research and analysis center in the Philippines without required testing.
The number of companies affected by a faulty antivirus update released by Trend Micro during the weekend stands at 652 businesses, but the company has no plans to compensate users for losses they may have incurred as a result, executives said at a news conference on Tuesday. "I am really, really sorry for releasing this product ... [which caused] a lot of trouble for our customers and stopped your businesses working for more than two days," says Eva Chen, chief executive officer at Trend Micro. Despite the problems, Trend Micro does not plan to pay compensation to individuals and corporate clients, says Mahendra Negi, the company's chief financial officer. "We have been focusing on supporting our customers ... we are not looking at compensation," he says. So far, the company has not received any news of legal action by individuals or companies, or of corporate customers withdrawing from contracts with Trend Micro, Negi says.