SEC proposes evaluation of XBRL use.The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has proposed to allow filings that include tagged financial information using extensible business reporting language (XBRL (EXtensible Business Reporting Language) A specification for publishing financial information in the XML format. It is designed to provide a standard set of XML tags for exchanging accounting information and financial statements between companies and analysts. )--in addition to the required HTML HTML in full HyperText Markup Language Markup language derived from SGML that is used to prepare hypertext documents. Relatively easy for nonprogrammers to master, HTML is the language used for documents on the World Wide Web. or ASCII ASCII or American Standard Code for Information Interchange, a set of codes used to represent letters, numbers, a few symbols, and control characters. Originally designed for teletype operations, it has found wide application in computers. format filings--to its Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval See EDGAR (Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval). (EDGAR Edgar or Eadgar (both: ĕd`gər), 943?–975, king of the English (959–75), son of Edmund, king of Wessex. In 957 the Mercians and Northumbrians rebelled against Edgar's brother Edwy and chose Edgar as their king. ) system. The voluntary program, proposed to begin in early 2005, is intended to help the SEC evaluate the usefulness of data tagging in general and XBRL in particular. Viewed as an important step in enhancing and modernizing financial reporting, XBRL is an open standard for software based on extensible markup language See XML. (language, text) Extensible Markup Language - (XML) An initiative from the W3C defining an "extremely simple" dialect of SGML suitable for use on the World-Wide Web. http://w3.org/XML/. (XML) that uses data tags to provide greater context specifically to financial data. Instead of treating financial information as a block of text, it provides a computer-readable identifying tag for each individual item of data. For example,"company net profit" has its own unique tag. The data tags enable computers to recognize specific data, select it, analyze it, store it, and exchange it with other computers, eliminating processes of manual re-entry and allowing for the automatic exchange of financial information across various software platforms, including the Internet. Comments submitted during the public comment period that ended Nov. 1 show broad support for the program by the financial and business communities. To see the proposed rule and comments, visit http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml. For more information about XBRL, visit www.xbrl.org. |
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