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People want to know, says Nobel prize winner [Earth & Sky Podcast] Posted: 19 Jun 2008 04:06 AM CDT Nobel Prize-wnning astrophysicist John Mather talks about the next generation of telescopes – the James Webb Telescope. It should help answer many questions about this universe in which we find ourselves. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Posted: 18 Jun 2008 10:04 AM CDT Develop the Ratings table/index The ratings table consists of 3 columns. Severity Rating Occurrence Rating And Detectability Rating You typically have a scale from 1 to 5, 7 or 10 depending on the level of granularity that is needed in your organization Anyone who has done a real BIA would get the Severity section almost immediately. In short the trick here is to tie each escalating level of severity to some specific series of business impacts. Brand/Reputation - TJX, Hannaford ... what else needs be said Direct Financial Loss - Fraud, Equipment Damage, Theft, Embezzlement, Lost Sales ... Indirect Financial Loss - Cost of Data Recreation, Lost FTO time, Lost future sales, Project Delays Legal Liability - often part of direct and indirect but also includes, Legal costs, Fines, Cost of increased regulatory oversight ... Compliance - The costs associated with failed compliance Many more ... when you develop the ranking table do it with the business leads and let them define their concerns Occurrence, and Detection Continued later I will stress this one more time this is not a risk assessment it is a risk priority ranking. The risk guru's will definitely get the distinction right away but if you don't get it and you are doing this you will eventually run into the all powerful cost justification argument. It is powerful when dealing with audit and those pesky internal budget decisions. Because it focuses primarily on priority it is faster, easier and more agile. Think 10 meetings vice 100 with 20 people instead of 200. (obviously adjust those for company size) |
June full moon mirrors path of December sun [Earth & Sky Podcast] Posted: 18 Jun 2008 04:06 AM CDT June 18, 2008. Today’s full moon comes just two days before June 20, which is this year's date of summer solstice for the northern hemisphere and winter solstice for the southern hemisphere. The path of the June full moon mimics the path of the December sun across the sky. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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