[ale] a quick test of web site stupid

Jim Kinney jim.kinney at gmail.com
Fri Mar 8 11:24:39 EST 2013


Exactly. What this does do is require that public facing code that has the
potential to cause harm is reviewed and approved by someone that society,
working through bright people in the field, trusts will stamp that code as
"best available methods at this time". There will still be loads of jobs
for non-certified coders.

We already have the Business A -> Business B process. It doesn't work very
well.

On Thu, Mar 7, 2013 at 9:46 AM, John Pilman <jcpilman at gmail.com> wrote:

> Damon, I know that talk of registration can lead to that kind of
> apprehension, but that is not the way professional registration works. In
> my engineering office of 25 highly qualified and very productive people,
> only one is a registered engineer in Georgia (not me).  Similarly, most
> medical treatment is carried out by people who are not board certified
> doctors.  Whatever else professional registration does, it will not remove
> you from your job.
>
> ...John
>
>
>
> On Thu, Mar 7, 2013 at 8:44 AM, Chesser.Damon <Damon.Chesser at suntrust.com>wrote:
>
>>  I find the idea of REQUIRING by law, a certain level of proficiency as
>> determined by minimal educational standards and test results abhorrent.  I
>> hold no degree.  I do the work.  100% self educated.  You just legislated
>> me to the unemployment line.  Just what we need, MORE government layers to
>> comply with.
>>
>>
>>
>> How about this, if business A is stupid and hires stupid people and has a
>> security breach, all those customers can move to business B which was not
>> stupid.  Business A has self regulated themselves out of the market or self
>> regulated themselves out of stupid.
>>
>>
>>
>> Damon at damtek.com
>>
>>
>>
>> *From:* ale-bounces at ale.org [mailto:ale-bounces at ale.org] *On Behalf Of *Jay
>> Lozier
>> *Sent:* Wednesday, March 06, 2013 6:06 PM
>>
>> *To:* ale at ale.org
>> *Subject:* Re: [ale] a quick test of web site stupid
>>
>>
>>
>> On 03/06/2013 04:44 PM, Jim Kinney wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 4:10 PM, Matt Hessel <matt.hessel at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> I see the idea behind the certification, but in practice that seems
>> mostly useful to employers when hiring individuals with little on their
>> resume.
>>
>>
>>
>> This is different than a certification because there would be
>> design/development standards required that are vendor independent.
>>
>>   It's not for employers. It's for lawyers and judges to use as a
>> bludgeon to make companies use good practices is coding for public
>> consumption. If company FOO is in software development, and they provide
>> code for banking, they MUST have a certified banking code engineer on staff
>> and sign off on the code or else that code is not legal to use for banking.
>> Or they can pay a banking code engineering firm to evaluate their code and
>> sign off if it suits the engineers standards.
>>
>> If mom-n-pop company hires a developer to put up a web site, they don't
>> need a certified engineer to approve anything UNTIL they add something like
>> shopping site with credit card stuff. If their website gets defaced because
>> they hired an idiot, that's their problem. If their website gets hacked and
>> credit card data is stolen, then it's a criminal offense on them for
>> deploying code that was not approved by a professional engineer. I see
>> drop-in certified modules for various platforms to do this.
>>
>> This would help PHB inline; just tell them they will have an all expense
>> paid multi-year vacation in the prison system.
>>
>>
>> I can't build a bridge for public use until I am a certified, tested and
>> passed Professional Engineer. As a PE, it's MY name on the line for the
>> stuff I sign off on. So a PE won't approve crap. Is it a perfect system?
>> Nope. But it keeps slick talking idiots from building bridges and
>> practicing law and medicine.
>>
>> Legally, there are slick idiots who manage to fool people from time to
>> time.
>>
>>
>> A person who passes a PE exam doesn't need much else on their resume.
>> It's not possible to pass without mountains of knowledge and/or experience.
>> There is already a Professional Software Engineer license process. What is
>> needed is to add HIPPA and Banking modules (or more generically - data
>> security) and then require that places that use software in these fields
>> have X years to be using certified, compliant software or they get shut
>> down, fined out the ass or both for repeated violations. "Market forces"
>> can't fix this crap. It's like why we all drive on the right hand side of
>> the road. Someone decided we have to clean up the mess and made it happen.
>>
>> like i need another project....
>>
>>
>>
>> Being from another engineering field you need the PE to review and sign
>> off on the design. Also, for a PE it is a multi-step process  of tests and
>> experience. I believe there is an education requirement that you must have
>> a physical science or engineering (BS level or higher) to be allowed to
>> take any exam.  You must pass the EIT - Engineer-in-Training exam for a
>> specific engineering discipline (Civil, Chemical, Electrical, etc), then
>> you must work in the field for several years before you can even take the
>> PE exam in the same field. I believe there are continuing education
>> requirements for a PE license.
>>
>> What I have seen is the PE requires the vendor to submit all design/load
>> calculations for review with the drawings and documentation. The PE must
>> approve the submission before you have permission to proceed; there might
>> be a couple of rounds of submissions before approval. Competent vendors
>> know what is needed and often will only have the finalize the details for
>> the submission.
>>
>>
>>  --
>>
>> Jay Lozier
>>
>> jslozier at gmail.com
>>
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-- 
-- 
James P. Kinney III
*
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