Oklahoma Code § 62-34.26

Title 62. Public Finance: Open-systems concept
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
A.  Any state agency, board, commission, or authority which
establishes an electronic portal system shall use an open-systems
concept for the portal system which has been approved by the
Information Services Division of the Office of Management and
Enterprise Services.
B.  No state agency, board, commission, or authority shall enter
into an agreement for development of, enhancement to, or maintenance
of an electronic portal system without the written authorization of
the Information Services Division.
C.  For purposes of this section, an "open-systems concept"
shall mean a system that implements sufficient open specifications
for interfaces, services, and supporting formats to enable properly
engineered components to be utilized across a wide range of systems
with minimal changes, to interoperate with other components on local
and remote systems, and to interact with users in a style that
facilitates portability.  An open-systems concept is characterized
by the following:
1.  Well-defined, widely used, and nonproprietary interfaces or
protocols;
2.  Use of standards which are developed and adopted by industry
recognized standards-making bodies;
3.  A definition of all aspects of system interfaces to
facilitate new or additional system capabilities for a wide range of
applications; and
4.  An explicit provision for expansion or upgrading through the
incorporation of additional or higher performance elements with
minimal impact on the system.
Added by Laws 2001, c. 375, § 3, emerg. eff. June 4, 2001.
Renumbered from § 41.5r of this title by Laws 2009, c. 441, § 64,
eff. July 1, 2009.  Amended by Laws 2009, c. 451, § 15, eff. April
5, 2010; Laws 2012, c. 304, § 359.
NOTE:  Laws 2009, c. 451, § 26, provides: “The provisions of
Sections 3 through 15, 17 through 20, 22 and 23 of this act shall be
effective and shall become operative on the effective date of the
appointment of the first Chief Information Officer by the Governor
as provided for in Section 2 of this act.”  The first Chief
Information Officer was appointed by the Governor on April 5, 2010.

‹ Prev All Oklahoma sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.