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Oregon vs. Oracle: the Battle of Blame Heats Up

Rambo Tribble (1273454) writes "The ongoing efforts to assign responsibility for the disastrous attempts to create the Cover Oregon health exchange, the primary contractor for which was Oracle Corporation, have entered a new round, with Governor John Kitzhaber calling on State Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum to initiate legal action against the firm. Kitzhaber has also sought the help of Washington D.C. in sanctioning Oracle, though Oregon's own management of the project and the terms of their contract with Oracle muddy the waters, considerably. Although the AG's office hasn't committed to filing suit, yet, AG Rosenblum has said, 'I share your determination to recover every dollar to which Oregon is entitled.' Although the outcome of this is uncertain, it is likely heads, both corporate and political, will roll."

4 of 83 comments (clear)

  1. Both are to blame by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anytime a large project goes down in flames like this, both the 'company' and the contractor are at fault.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  2. Re:Another Goverment Run by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or:

    Another contract which was contracted out to a large corporate entity has not delivered, way over budget, and fully into the blame part of the project.

  3. Vapor roles by GregBryant · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oregon produced an audit of the Oracle Debacle here: http://www.oregon.gov/DAS/docs... The audit answered the wrong questions. It accepted the magical notions and vapor roles of Oracle's corporate propaganda. For example, it focuses on the need for a 'systems integrator', as if every engineer should -not- be responsible for integration. The two big problems: 1) The computer industry's current authoritarian obsession with subdivided tasks, specialization, core competence, detailed requirements, 'no surprises' (meaning no good surprises, either), and dogmatic 'best practices' has created a generation of corporate slaves who aren't allowed to use their minds or take responsibility for anything important. 2) Which brings us to motivation. Oracle and other corporate oligarchs only want money. They have no responsibility to do anything else. Maximizing the bill is the sole priority. Three programmers, picked at random, who live in Oregon, and who have friends that need insurance, would have finished this job with FOSS, not proprietary software, in half the time a fraudulent Oracle and a corrupt State's office took to generate a broken system.

  4. Re: private market by theCzechGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Free market would, but there was no free market in this case. Oligarchy at best.