Jacob
What goes around comes around.
Er, hmm, oh yes they are!
They merge into one another: agreement on a standard, regulations to impose the standard, directives to the agreement on the standard, ad infinitum!
How do you see them differently CC?
Er, hmm, oh yes they are!
VERY roughly speaking, standards are voluntary, laws etc are mandatory.Er, hmm, oh yes they are!
They merge into one another: agreement on a standard, regulations to impose the standard, directives to the agreement on the standard, ad infinitum!
How do you see them differently CC?
There you go! The regulation imposes an obligation to meet a standard.............
Regulations are mandatory - you must comply, or face legal sanction. Steam boilers, for example - the regulations state that you must hold valid insurance to steam a boiler. It's the responsibility of the insurance company (not government or legal agencies) to ensure that your boiler meets the standards they specify; if you steam your boiler without satisfying their requirements, your insurance is invalid, and you can be prosecuted for using an uninsured boiler. The law does not specify which standards you must meet, just that you must hold valid insurance.
.......
Wrong. Read what was written carefully, Jacob. The regulation imposes an obligation to hold valid insurance - that's all.As I say. law/standard/agreement/regulation all overlap
There you go! The regulation imposes an obligation to meet a standard.
Not sure why you want to make a distinction, they overlap, are commutable, regulations/agreements/laws may or may not be about standards. Some standards may be voluntary, others obligatory.
That particular insurance may, but the insurer would expect the insured to meet a standard (if there is one). It's commonly called passing the buck.Wrong. Read what was written carefully, Jacob. The regulation imposes an obligation to hold valid insurance - that's all.
But we no longer live in 1950s britain (much to chagrin of some).
Ha, we'll remember that you said this, not that I'm cynical of course!Ditching EU standards as we speak, finalised any day now. Less red tape should help speed up our trade with the whole world and possibly the universe! We'll soon see the results.
Moi? As if!Davey44, Richard_C; I rather suspect Jacob was being facetious with the "less red tape" comment; possibly in order to wind up a few individuals.
I think this whole anthithesis to EU rules is because powerful vested interests want us to eat their produce which meets lower standards in terms of food safety, animal welfare and environmental responsibility. It's not so much straight/bendy bananas as chlorinated chicken, pesticide residues etc.
It is interesting when you look at the American sweets in tesco. All the labels have to be re - done to UK/Euro standard and they have paper labels over the originals. Many of the chocolate products are not legally chocolate and must be called "chocolate flavoured".
Note how this thread drifted from (mutually agreed) standards to regulation. Selected standards vs legal obligations?
I disagree, the slide rule could be used for safety critical calculations, and any inaccuracy could result in an error. That error if not controlled i.e. the accuracy of the slide rule were not controlled, could easily result in a danger to consumers due to the inaccuracies in the resultant calculation caused by inaccuracies in the slide rule because there arr no controls or standards to which the slide rule needs to be manufactured to.Legal obligations should be in place for standards where there's a threshold below which danger to consumers could occur. So there shouldn't be legal obligations for the accuracy of a slide rule for example.
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