A type of logic bomb
that is set-off—either once or at different intervals—at some preset time.
Though much has been written about time bombs in fiction books, and tales exist
about time bombs being set up in company computers by programmers about to be
fired, few real such events have actually been reported. One incident
apparently occurred in 1986 in the Soviet Union when an upset programmer at the
Volga Automobile Plant planted a time bomb, halting production on the main
assembly plant for a day (not coincidentally a week after the programmer went
on vacation). The case received much media attention in the Soviet Union, in
part because it was the first cracking case to make it to court there and the
logic bomb exploit got the programmer a three-year prison sentence.
See Also:
Logic Bomb.
Farlex, Inc. Time Bomb Definition. [Online, 2004.] Farlex, Inc. Website.
http://computing-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/time%20bomb.