The BBC has suspended the
BlackBerry PDA service
used by more than 300 senior executives, including Director General Mark
Thompson.
A BBC spokeswoman told
vnunet.com: "Last week we
noticed a fault in that some users were getting fragments of other people's
email in their own email. So we suspended the service and it will remain
suspended until it is fixed."
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Executives are having to revert to PC-based email and phones rather than use
the BlackBerry devices which allow them to make phone calls as well as receive
texts and emails.
The BBC's IT services supplier,
Siemens, is taking
responsibility for solving the problem.
BlackBerry manufacturer
Research In Motion said in a
statement: "RIM has developed and tested a fix for an obscure bug identified in
a specific service pack release for
BlackBerry
Enterprise Server.
"The bug was isolated to version 4.02 and does not exist in version 4.03 or
other earlier versions. RIM is aware of a single reported incident of the bug,
and responded promptly with a fix."
The bug related to a "rare conjunction" of circumstances "whereby v4.02
failed to properly compensate for an unusual memory allocation error generated
by a company's mail server and consequently appended a partial message to
another email.
"Neither the original message or the appended partial message were ever
exposed outside the company's firewall and the bug did not generate any external
risk. Customers using v4.02 may obtain this fix from RIM or install v4.03."
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