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A DEFINITION OF YEAR 2000 CONFORMITY REQUIREMENTSThis document addresses what is commonly known as Year 2000 conformity (also sometimes known as century or millennium compliance). It provides a definition of this expression and requirements that must be satisfied in equipment and products which use dates and times. It has been prepared by British Standards Institution committee BDD/1/-/3 in response to demand from UK industry, commerce and the public sector. It is the result of work from the following bodies whose contributions are gratefully acknowledged: BT, Cap Gemini, CCTA, Coopers & Lybrand, Halberstam Elias, ICL, National Health Service, National Westminster Bank. BSI-DISC would also like to thank the following organizations for their support and encouragement in the development of this definition: taskforce 2000, Barclays Bank, British Airways, Cambridgeshire County Council, Computer Software Services Association, Department of Health, Ernst & Young, Federation of Small Businesses, IBM, ICI, National Power, Paymaster Agency, Prudential Assurance, Reuters, Tesco Stores. While every care has been taken in developing this document, the contributing organizations accept no liability for any loss or damage caused, arising directly or indirectly, in connection with reliance on its contents except to the extent that such liability may not be excluded at law. Independent legal advice should be sought by any person or organization intending to enter into a contractual commitment relating to Year 2000 conformity requirements. This entire document or the definition section may be freely copied provided that the text is reproduced in full, the source acknowledged and the reference number of the document is quoted. THE DEFINITION In particular: Rule 1. No value for current date will cause any interruption in operation. Rule 2. Date-based functionality must behave consistently for dates prior to, Rule 3. In all interfaces and data storage, the century in any date must be Rule 4. Year 2000 must be recognized as a leap year. AMPLIFICATION OF THE DEFINITION AND RULES To avoid such problems, organizations must check, and modify if necessary, internally produced equipment and products and similarly check externally supplied equipment and products with their suppliers. The purpose of this document is to allow such checks to be made on a basis of common understanding. Where checks are made with external suppliers, care should be taken to distinguish between claims of conformity and the ability to demonstrate conformity. Rule 1 Rule 2 Rule 3 (a) explicit representation of the year in dates: e.g. by using four digits or by including a century indicator. In this case, a reference may be inserted (e.g. 4-digit years as allowed by ISO standard 8601:1988) and it may be necessary to allow for exceptions where domain-specific standards (e.g. standards relating to Electronic Data Interchange, Automatic Teller Machines or Bankers Automated Clearing Services) should have precedence. (b) the use of inferencing rules: e.g. two-digit years with a value greater than 50 imply 19xx, those with a value equal to or less than 50 imply 20xx. Rules for century inferencing as a whole must apply to all contexts in which the date is used, although different inferencing rules may apply to different date sets. General Notes Where the term century is used, clear distinction should be made between the "value" denoting the century (e.g. 20th) and its representation in dates (e.g. 19xx); similarly, 21st and 20xx. DISC is a part of the British Standards Institution Document: DISC PD2000-1 A Definition of Year 2000 Conformity Requirements |
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