nadim@symbolic.software ("Nadim Kobeissi") wrote:
This practice of inflating reports with trivialities is harmful:
- Clients drown in low-quality reports bloated with trivial "findings".
- Auditors (like me) feel pressured to mimic this trend. If not, our succinct reports may be misconstrued as less thorough.Ironically, only the auditing firms engaging in this practice benefit, bragging about "100,000+ disclosed issues", without revealing the percentage of those were typos.
Enough with the noise, can we focus on quality over quantity?