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Trusted auditor: Difference between revisions

1,729 bytes added ,  8 November 2003
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so we are betting on betting... better do it elsewhere
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Who is a '''trusted auditor''' for [[Consumerium]]'s [[content wiki]]?  How do we know when to believe the [[instructional capital]] we have been provided by [[Consumerium:contributor]]s?  What other [[user role]]s must support auditors?
Who is a '''trusted auditor''' for [[Consumerium]]'s [[content wiki]]?


This function is so important, [[betting]] against the auditor finding problems might have to be supported directly, so there is maximum incentive for auditors to find all problems, and for [[troll]]s to keep maximum eye on the auditors.
One view is that it depends on who you, personally, choose to trust.  [[Content Wiki]] lets anyone sign any version of any article.  Setting [[preferences]] lets the [[buy signal]] reflect what / who you believe, and ignore who you don't.  In this view, however, everyone must do their own [[styles of capital]] analysis to decide, for instance, if [[deforestation]] is worse than the [[arms trade]], or countries that tolerate [[slavery]], or [[ape genocide]] or other horrors.  Very few people want to put lists of horrors in priority order, and some of the order comes from [[ecology]] and other sciences they don't know.  The great danger of this is that many [[worst cases]] can happen if people are encouraged to choose based on their own (not expert) judgement of what's "bad".
 
So, we will have to offer some sane default values.  And we need a default on how to set the default and so on.  And, beyond that, someone really has to review all the mechanics of signing and signalling, and disputes and protests, and the way [[score]] is handled, and make what amounts to a proof that the [[instructional capital]] we have been provided by [[Consumerium:contributor]]s is trustworthy.  All of this relies on a ''standard'' [[styles of capital]] analysis and probably ''standard'' [[accounting standard]]s like [[ISO 19011]].
 
The traditional view is that auditors must be outsiders.  But that might not be always wholly true here.  So, what other [[user role]]s must support auditors?  How can we avoid becoming [[Enron]], which also had '''trusted auditor'''s looking to ensure the shareholders had a realistic view into the financial situation (not!), that were not unfortunately "outside" enough.
 
This function is so important, [[betting]] against the auditor finding problems might have to be supported directly, so there is maximum incentive for auditors to find all problems, and for [[troll]]s to keep maximum eye on the auditors.  The bureaucratic view is that process works perfectly and never needs outside auditors.  This was the view at [[Enron]] too.
 
Auditors are a critical part of any [[Market Model]].
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