A company's reputation is what gets fried when its books get cooked
13th Nov 2006, 18:01 GMT
A University of Washington professor contends that penalties imposed upon public companies that falsify accounting records are miniscule compared with the costs incurred when news of a company's misdeeds spreads and its reputation spoils.
A company's reputation is what gets fried when its books get cooked related news:
- A company's reputation is what gets fried when its books get cooked — uwnews.org | Business
- Microsoft Sees Zune As Just Opening Act — MyAppleMenu
- No More Pencils, No More Books — SunbeltBLOG
- Jokes That Kermit Wouldnt Dare Tell — NYT > Television
- Fireside Chat: Mark Fletcher and Marc Hedlund (Part 2 of 3) — Signal vs. Noise
- Defeat of coalition in Iraq will spoil United States reputation: Howard — NewKerala World News
- Weekend is one for the books — Cincinnati Enquirer - Entertainment
- A menu for fried chicken and french fries is displayed on a ... — Entertainment Photos on Yahoo! News Photos
- Government Presents 100,000 Books to Schools — AllAfrica News: Ghana
- Books' richest prize releases longlist — Guardian Unlimited Books
Latest news from EurekAlert! - Policy and Ethics:
- Bariatric surgery complication rates high in some hospitals, new HealthGrades ratings and study show
- Sensor networks protect containers, navigate robots
- Queen's Surveillance Project benchmarks global attitudes about being watched
- Elderly, ill men get unneeded prostate cancer screenings
- Want fair and affordable health insurance for the uninsured? Ask the public to design it
- New book by University of Minnesota historian exposes Turkey's responsibility in Armenian genocide
- The Last Great Wilderness
- 'Moral clarity' espoused in debate over health-care reform
- RAND study says US should greatly expand efforts