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Applied FuSa
Wolfgang Freese
4 episodes
3 days ago
Hello and welcome to a new episode of “Applied FuSa,” the podcast for FuSa pragmatists!

The role of the Functional Safety Manager (FSM) established itself shortly after the first version of ISO 26262 was published in 2011. Usually, this role is explicitly assigned in safety-relevant projects—meaning a single employee takes on the role of FSM.

And yet, to our surprise, the role of the FSM is not defined anywhere in ISO 26262.

“What??”

You heard that right: The role of Functional Safety Manager does not exist in ISO 26262. But there is the role of Safety Manager.

“Isn’t that the same thing?”

No, not really.

In this episode, we will compare the role of the Safety Manager with the widely established role of the FSM. We will also look at if and how ISO 26262 defines responsibilities and accountabilities for work products like the Safety Plan, the Development Interface Agreement (DIA), and the Safety Case.
Show more...
How To
Education
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All content for Applied FuSa is the property of Wolfgang Freese and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Hello and welcome to a new episode of “Applied FuSa,” the podcast for FuSa pragmatists!

The role of the Functional Safety Manager (FSM) established itself shortly after the first version of ISO 26262 was published in 2011. Usually, this role is explicitly assigned in safety-relevant projects—meaning a single employee takes on the role of FSM.

And yet, to our surprise, the role of the FSM is not defined anywhere in ISO 26262.

“What??”

You heard that right: The role of Functional Safety Manager does not exist in ISO 26262. But there is the role of Safety Manager.

“Isn’t that the same thing?”

No, not really.

In this episode, we will compare the role of the Safety Manager with the widely established role of the FSM. We will also look at if and how ISO 26262 defines responsibilities and accountabilities for work products like the Safety Plan, the Development Interface Agreement (DIA), and the Safety Case.
Show more...
How To
Education
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Safety Plan and Safety Case
Applied FuSa
25 minutes 38 seconds
1 week ago
Safety Plan and Safety Case
Interestingly, even 14 years after the release of the first version of ISO 26262, there are still no standardized templates for the Safety Plan and the Safety Case. What we often see instead are simple lists of the work products defined in the standard. However, it’s questionable whether such lists actually meet the ISO’s requirements for these two deliverables. At least in the case of the Safety Case, that’s likely not the case.

In today’s episode, we’ll take a completely different approach—by presenting a solution that integrates both work products. In other words, a deliverable that serves as both a Safety Plan and a Safety Case.
Applied FuSa
Hello and welcome to a new episode of “Applied FuSa,” the podcast for FuSa pragmatists!

The role of the Functional Safety Manager (FSM) established itself shortly after the first version of ISO 26262 was published in 2011. Usually, this role is explicitly assigned in safety-relevant projects—meaning a single employee takes on the role of FSM.

And yet, to our surprise, the role of the FSM is not defined anywhere in ISO 26262.

“What??”

You heard that right: The role of Functional Safety Manager does not exist in ISO 26262. But there is the role of Safety Manager.

“Isn’t that the same thing?”

No, not really.

In this episode, we will compare the role of the Safety Manager with the widely established role of the FSM. We will also look at if and how ISO 26262 defines responsibilities and accountabilities for work products like the Safety Plan, the Development Interface Agreement (DIA), and the Safety Case.