Archive for the 'Technology' Category

My Davos Contribution: How Finance and XBRL Can Restart Sustainable Growth

BRUSSELS–As I’m enjoying outstanding Belgian cuisine with the family of a CLOUD, Inc. colleague after a day of meetings about how computer standards can improve the clarity and efficient use of information and provide for more accurate evaluation of the trust that one might place in information, a 500-mile drive south of here the world’s financial leaders are contemplating the future of finance.

My hope is that my modest contribution (Chapter 2.1, page 68) to a book published at the World Economic Forum in Davos entitled “Trust Meltdown: The Financial Industry Needs a Fundamental Restart” finds its way into enough reading stacks of enough of those in attendance to make a difference. Continue reading ‘My Davos Contribution: How Finance and XBRL Can Restart Sustainable Growth’

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Commented on “A VC”

The Dragon App for the iPhone works pretty well too — it seems faster and almost as accurate as V10 of the full program on my PC, although as someone who was trained to write on a keyboard, I’m more comfortable typing — even though I think my writing may sometimes be better when it’s dictated first and then manually edited. Continue reading ‘Commented on “A VC”’

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What if Some of this Waste Had Instead Gone to Passenger Intelligence IT?

We taped this story at the intelligence facility responsible for passenger manifest information. Given the focus of attention on the use of intelligence about passengers in recent days, the choice of location seems all too prescient. The reason we chose the location was to illustrate the point of the story: the homeland security budget process was broken and needed to be fixed. Continue reading ‘What if Some of this Waste Had Instead Gone to Passenger Intelligence IT?’

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XBRL, Journalism, Lawyering, Business, Charlie Hoffman, and the Semanitc Web

Charlie Hoffman just made the most enlightening post I’ve read in a long time. It’s no accident that the best journalism is Continue reading ‘XBRL, Journalism, Lawyering, Business, Charlie Hoffman, and the Semanitc Web’

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XBRL Data Tagging Standards Advance on Two Fronts

Updated: 8:30 a.m., Tuesday, Dec. 15

Government Transparency

Updates:

The House approved S. 303 by voice vote on Monday, Dec. 14. The bill text and debate are immediately below; the debate starts on page H14837. An easier-to-read version of S. 303 is also below. The most important part of the bill, about data standard requirements, is in xml format here.

House Debate on S. 303 (Cong. Record pp. H14835-39
S. 303 – See pp. 14-19 re common data standard

Official statement and edited video.

Original post:

Back on June 17, I blogged about the Government Information Transparency Act. The goal of government information transparency took a step closer to reality today when the co-sponsors of the bill, Reps. Edolphus Towns and Darrell Issa, added their bill’s provisions to a Senate bill to improve the federal grant system. The gist of the legislation is that when it is implemented, taxpayers will get protection via transparency and rules-based reporting in a way that’s similar to how investors now get better information from public companies via a combination of U.S. GAAP and XBRL. The good news is that government grant accounting is a heck of a lot less complicated than U.S. GAAP, so that protection should be faster to arrive, much less expensive to implement, and even more reliable.

Here’s video of this landmark meeting to advance government transparency:

Economic Transparency

Also today, the SEC posted a new more detailed comment on a pending rulemaking about how asset-backed securities are disclosed. It’s 13 pages of plain English. (See background, including excerpt from a speech by SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro.) Of the millions of words written about the financial crisis, these pages include just about every word you need to know:

Edgar Online re ABS: Modernize Disclosure, Cut Costs, Achieve Transparency, Restart Securitization
Even better, unlike most of those other millions of words, these words include an explanation of how to reconcile the interests of Wall Street in profits with the interests of all Americans in healthy, working, fair, transparent capital markets. Let’s hope the words spoken on Capitol Hill today and the words posted by the SEC today all matter — soon.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/thurion/ / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
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A Thought on Capital Market Power, Risk, Small Caps, and Large Caps

A few days ago I tweeted a question about whether a theory that less expensive stock trading contributed to fewer IPO’s holds water. The theory is that cheaper trading results in less revenue to fund analyst coverage of companies hoping to go public in the $50 million – $100 million range. In the 90s, a relatively small number of such companies — big names today — created hundreds of thousands of new jobs Continue reading ‘A Thought on Capital Market Power, Risk, Small Caps, and Large Caps’

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Google, SAP, and Salesforce.com Could Save Credit Markets and Journalism

Saturday’s Barron’s had a pithy review of Ken Aulettta’s Googled: The End of the World As We Know It.To sum it up, reviewer Mark Veverka says, “Google’s science exposes the inefficiency of traditional advertising and threatens to remove middlemen.”

In other words, as went record labels and travel agents,  so goes my first chosen profession, journalism. The inefficiency of Continue reading ‘Google, SAP, and Salesforce.com Could Save Credit Markets and Journalism’

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