The UK Post Office scandal holds lessons for telecom
“Computer says no.” The catchphrase, immortalized in a series of Little Britain comedy sketches from the noughties, brilliantly mocks society’s overreliance on and trust in technology. In the sketches, a glum-faced PC operator routinely dismisses people’s queries and complaints, or simply tells bewildered individuals they are wrong, after some furious bashing at a keyboard. That catchphrase is a neat, three-word summary of attitudes during the UK’s Post Office scandal, which dominates national headlines in the country this week. And there are lessons to be learnt for other organizations, telcos included.
For those outside the UK, and probably in the dark about all this, the government-owned Post Office, a so-called “national institution,” relentlessly and ruthlessly pursued prosecutions against hundreds of employees accused of stealing money when the blame – it turned out – lay squarely with faulty software provided by Japan’s Fujitsu. Forced to pay back what they had “stolen,” dozens lost their livelihoods and homes. Some were imprisoned. A few took their lives.
This all happened between 2000 and 2015. It was thanks to some diligent reporting by Computer Weekly in 2009 that it first came to light. Now widely acknowledged as the biggest miscarriage of justice the UK has ever seen, it is in the news this week because of a recent ITV dramatization watched by millions. Shockingly, most victims have yet to have their convictions overturned or receive compensation. Amid overdue public outrage, the government now intends to race through legislation for a mass quashing.
As in those Little Britain sketches, the starting point for all concerned – bar the actual victims – was that the computer must be right, ergo the people (the postmasters, in this case) had to be wrong. The Post Office managers would regularly insist Fujitsu’s software was “robust,” and the UK’s criminal justice system would just accept it as fact. Postmasters were vilified in the local communities they had dutifully served for years. This was despite the total lack of evidence that any real money went missing. No one apparently considered the improbability of one organization employing such a disproportionate number of thieves and fraudsters. Money postmasters were subsequently forced to hand over seems to have fattened Post Office profits. It is all hard to believe.
Fujitsu under fire
What has all this to do with telecom? First off, some of the players involved in the scandal are today active in telecom, and principally Fujitsu. The Japanese technology firm is now under scrutiny over the role it played in the scandal. In the late nineties, it reportedly leant on the UK government to sign contracts even though its employees knew there were problems with the software, branded Horizon, at the time. There is suspicion Fujitsu was complicit in a Post Office cover-up. An investigation is underway.
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