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CLOUD Finance

When Standards Interact: A CLOUD-Inspired Future for XBRL

During a recent trip to Seattle, I had the pleasure of sitting down for lunch with Charlie Hoffman, father of XBRLPaul Wilkinson, Chief Strategy Officer for CLOUD and former Sr. Adviser to Chairman Cox at the SEC, had introduced us, and we’ve had a few good phone conversations over the past year about CLOUD and XBRL.

During our lunch, Charlie had an interesting reaction to CLOUD, describing it as the “logical model for the semantic web.”  That lunch conversation, plus my reading of his and Liv Watson’s excellent book, “XBRL for Dummies,” have sparked some interesting thoughts about ways in which CLOUD and XBRL might interact in practical ways.

With all the discussion over transparency, open government and “government” data, it seemed like an interesting example could be culled from current places in which XBRL is already being used: public filings.  Of course, the very fact that a verb like “filed” is used to describe the process tells me that even without CLOUD, XBRL is not meeting its full potential.  If I understand the process for SEC filings in XBRL correctly, a public company still “sends” or “files” their XBRL Instance to the SEC, so as to meet their filing requirements.  In the world of the Internet, this makes no sense to me at all.  If we had to “send” HTML documents around the Internet, the Web would never have taken off!

That being said, I will move on…  The example that follows will highlight how XBRL-wrapped data, further empowered by a contextual set of CLOUD tags, could create a more dynamic and secure process.   Read the rest of this entry »

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Asset-Backed Securities: Python/XML/XBRL & The Question of Languages

Over the past couple of weeks, an interesting debate has unfolded around the SEC’s proposed rule to increase investor protections in asset-backed securities. My friend and CLOUD colleague, Paul Wilkinson, forwarded the proposed rule to me while I was in Europe for the Health 2.0 conference in Paris, a trip from which I returned just two days prior to the volcano in Iceland spewing its ash into European airspace!

Following the Health 2.0 Conference on April 6 and 7 and meetings with the innovation leadership at SWIFT on April 8 in Brussels, my wife and I enjoyed some time with her family in Belgium before returning home.  It was during this time with family that an interesting conversation unfolded over a delicious lunch in the countryside west of Brussels that unexpectedly yielded some intriguing historical insights into language and access.

My wife’s aunt lives in a beautiful old farmhouse that has been renovated several times over its life.  One of those renovations is a truly special library (populated with many, many antique books by her now deceased uncle and former justice on the Belgian Court of Appeals). Read the rest of this entry »

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Bank Technology News Reports Consumers Want to Control Personal Information

James Van Dyke writes in the Oct. 2009 Bank Technology News that new research shows more than 80% of bank customers see themselves as part of security solutions. This is good news for safer and more efficient use of data in all Internet transactions.

With consumers seeking greater participation in their security, banks, issuers, merchants, and vendors can take advantage of the tremendous growth opportunities in the financial security sector. Security professionals can improve their ability to fund strategic investments in customer-partnered security methods, using factual research data to bolster business cases with benefits such as increased customer acquisition, cross-selling, loyalty, and increased preference at point-of purchase.

CLOUD’s priority is the creation of standards to make consumer control over their own information faster, easier and less expensive.

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