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Show Notes
Hello and welcome to a new episode of “Applied FuSa,” a podcast for FuSa pragmatists.
“We have to do this because it’s written in the ISO.” You hear that a lot, but it’s not always true. In line with the motto “Everything goes, nothing’s a must,” ISO 26262 offers enough flexibility in how its requirements are implemented. In fact, deviations are allowed—as long as it’s demonstrated that they don’t result in an unacceptable, safety-relevant risk.
In other words: everything is fine as long as functional safety concepts are implemented completely and correctly, since these are the ultimate goal from a FuSa perspective. This episode explains the ISO 26262 requirements regarding tailoring.
Which raises the question: can those requirements themselves be tailored? Hmm… now it’s getting complicated… but let’s wait and see.
“We have to do this because it’s written in the ISO.” You hear that a lot, but it’s not always true. In line with the motto “Everything goes, nothing’s a must,” ISO 26262 offers enough flexibility in how its requirements are implemented. In fact, deviations are allowed—as long as it’s demonstrated that they don’t result in an unacceptable, safety-relevant risk.
In other words: everything is fine as long as functional safety concepts are implemented completely and correctly, since these are the ultimate goal from a FuSa perspective. This episode explains the ISO 26262 requirements regarding tailoring.
Which raises the question: can those requirements themselves be tailored? Hmm… now it’s getting complicated… but let’s wait and see.
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