There have been medical devices external to the body for a long time. Therac 25 (1982) is world wide web (1989). Airplanes were first flight controlled by computer in 1958, and commercially in the concorde in 1969.
Think about that for a minute. There has been an official government review process for safety of computer controlled airplanes since the 70s, and a good decade for medical devices (likely earlier) 10 years earlier than the WWW existed.
I think it's kind of funny that you'd think that you were doing it better than production life critical systems THAT CAN ACTUALLY KILL PEOPLE that have been around at least ten if not 30 years longer than the tech you likely (sorry assumption) base your career around.
Uh, did you really just cite Therac 25 in favor of safety review? You do know that was the one that had a bug which slipped past review and killed some people, right?
Your overall point is well taken, but maybe put a little more thought into the examples you pick to support it...
I cited it as a thing that killed people and caused an industry overhaul in how things were reviewed... Remember that toyota just was forced to do somthing like this only a few years ago. I'd say the FDA has been cognizant of life threatening code for a lot longer.
Think about that for a minute. There has been an official government review process for safety of computer controlled airplanes since the 70s, and a good decade for medical devices (likely earlier) 10 years earlier than the WWW existed.
I think it's kind of funny that you'd think that you were doing it better than production life critical systems THAT CAN ACTUALLY KILL PEOPLE that have been around at least ten if not 30 years longer than the tech you likely (sorry assumption) base your career around.