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Posted by HansF on 12/19/05 20:34
On Mon, 19 Dec 2005 09:35:08 -0800, Crazy Cat wrote:
> Please elaborate on Sarbanes Oxley -- I looked it up but not sure how
> it applies to me (software developer). Isn't that
> targeted at accountants? My function and the project I'm working on
> have nothing to do with accounting -- it's an engineering
> function.
Sarb-Ox is a legal device for enforcing accountability, not accounting.
Basically it means that there must be a verifiable audit trail (just like
ISO-900x) for any operation that *may* impact the financial status of the
organization. This includes any data manipulation using any database
and/or programming tools.
(To counter Enron, everything must be verifiably unschreddable, or
verifiably have no impact on the org's financials.)
It also means that the CEO is personally on the hook for ensuring the
compliance, at risk of a jail term and huge fines. Since CEOs delegate
responsibility, that means that everyone down the corporate ladder may
directly or indirectly be in the path of the delegation.
The succeess of your project and the pay or consulting fees of the
team on your project are expected to have a long-term impact on the
corporate financials. Therefore Sarb Ox applies.
(Heck, in a small organization the refund from recycling pop (soda) cans
from the company-supplied Coke machine could be considered having an
impact - there is no end to how silly the interpretation can become.)
--
Hans Forbrich
Canada-wide Oracle training and consulting
mailto: Fuzzy.GreyBeard_at_gmail.com
*** Top posting [replies] guarantees I won't respond. ***
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