Sunday, August 10, 2025



Courses
Courses
Here are some of the courses that you can buy from The Safety Artisan – follow the Udemy Course Links.

Stand-Alone Courses

How to Design a System Safety Program

https://www.udemy.com/course/system-safety-risk-analysis-programs/?referralCode=38B31C7BDD4DED49E44E

System Safety Engineering Process

https://www.udemy.com/course/system-safety-engineering-process/?referralCode=AA799BF5235D13D868D5

Principles of Software Safety Standards

https://www.udemy.com/course/principles-of-safe-software-design/?referralCode=25398951621CFC5B8471

System Safety Engineering Courses

How to: Preliminary Hazard Identification (Mil-Std-882E)

https://www.udemy.com/course/how-to-preliminary-hazard-identification-mil-std-882e/?referralCode=F681CF650D3BDDAD307B

How to: Preliminary Hazard Analysis (Mil-Std-882E)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6187483/?referralCode=1A153CA582E27235304D

How: System Requirements Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/how-system-requirements-hazard-analysis-with-mil-std-882e/?referralCode=919C1FCE9C325351BA24

How To: Sub-System Hazard Analysis (per Standard)

https://www.udemy.com/course/how-to-sub-system-hazard-analysis-with-mil-std-882e/?referralCode=D014CFEB810BD288A741

How to do System Hazard Analysis (per Standard)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6213023/?referralCode=C586042AEC0B17DD4A0D

How to: Operating & Support Hazard Analysis (Mil-Std-882E)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6222279/?referralCode=52AC8A5582A67DE77BB0

How to do Health Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6222285/?referralCode=F589E3A00F2F19CACDD3

How to do Functional Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6231311/?referralCode=E23E561F0202ACECA30B

How to do System of System Hazard Analysis (per Standard)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6243643/?referralCode=AEE718911215D78E6D94

How to do Environmental Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6238409/?referralCode=4253568A1CF2CD848BB8

Free Courses

Introduction to System / Product / Design Safety Concepts

https://www.udemy.com/course/introduction-to-system-product-design-safety-concepts/?referralCode=E173BDB0AD2525946E04

How to Prepare for the CISSP Exam

https://www.udemy.com/course/my-cissp-2021-exam-journey/?referralCode=579F4FD19E8ED2865D54

Risk Management 101

https://www.udemy.com/course/risk-management-101-b/?referralCode=E7C50B702696E593C59D

Back to home.

Simon Di Nucci https://www.safetyartisan.com/courses/


Courses
Courses
Here are some of the courses that you can buy: The Safety Artisan – Udemy Course Links.

Stand-Alone Courses

How to Design a System Safety Program

https://www.udemy.com/course/system-safety-risk-analysis-programs/?referralCode=38B31C7BDD4DED49E44E

System Safety Engineering Process

https://www.udemy.com/course/system-safety-engineering-process/?referralCode=AA799BF5235D13D868D5

Principles of Software Safety Standards

https://www.udemy.com/course/principles-of-safe-software-design/?referralCode=25398951621CFC5B8471

System Safety Engineering Courses

How to: Preliminary Hazard Identification (Mil-Std-882E)

https://www.udemy.com/course/how-to-preliminary-hazard-identification-mil-std-882e/?referralCode=F681CF650D3BDDAD307B

How to: Preliminary Hazard Analysis (Mil-Std-882E)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6187483/?referralCode=1A153CA582E27235304D

How: System Requirements Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/how-system-requirements-hazard-analysis-with-mil-std-882e/?referralCode=919C1FCE9C325351BA24

How To: Sub-System Hazard Analysis (per Standard)

https://www.udemy.com/course/how-to-sub-system-hazard-analysis-with-mil-std-882e/?referralCode=D014CFEB810BD288A741

How to do System Hazard Analysis (per Standard)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6213023/?referralCode=C586042AEC0B17DD4A0D

How to: Operating & Support Hazard Analysis (Mil-Std-882E)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6222279/?referralCode=52AC8A5582A67DE77BB0

How to do Health Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6222285/?referralCode=F589E3A00F2F19CACDD3

How to do Functional Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6231311/?referralCode=E23E561F0202ACECA30B

How to do System of System Hazard Analysis (per Standard)

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6243643/?referralCode=AEE718911215D78E6D94

How to do Environmental Hazard Analysis with Mil-Std-882E

https://www.udemy.com/course/draft/6238409/?referralCode=4253568A1CF2CD848BB8

Free Courses

Introduction to System / Product / Design Safety Concepts

https://www.udemy.com/course/introduction-to-system-product-design-safety-concepts/?referralCode=E173BDB0AD2525946E04

How to Prepare for the CISSP Exam

https://www.udemy.com/course/my-cissp-2021-exam-journey/?referralCode=579F4FD19E8ED2865D54

Risk Management 101

https://www.udemy.com/course/risk-management-101-b/?referralCode=E7C50B702696E593C59D

Back to home.

Simon Di Nucci https://www.safetyartisan.com/courses/

Friday, August 8, 2025



About

About The Safety Artisan - Safety Engineering and Risk Management Expert



About The Safety Artisan



https://youtu.be/qebeBeGj__4



Hi, everyone, and welcome to The Safety Artisan. I'm Simon, and I just wanted to share with you briefly why I started this enterprise. I've had a career in safety, engineering, and safety consulting for over 25 years now. And in that time, I've seen customers make one of two mistakes quite often. First of all, I've seen customers not do some things that they should have been doing. This was usually because they just were ignorant of what their legal obligations were.



And I guess that's a fairly obvious mistake. That's what you would expect me to say. But more often, I've seen customers do too much to try and achieve safety, which is surprising! I've seen people waste a lot of time, energy, and money doing things that just didn't make a difference. Sometimes it actually got in the way of doing good safety work.



And I think the reasons for those mistakes are, first of all, ignorance.



Secondly, not knowing precisely what safety is and therefore not being able to work out how to get there. That's why I started The Safety Artisan. I wanted to equip people with the knowledge of what safety really is and the tools to get there efficiently. To neither do too much nor too little. We want Safety, Just Right.



Simon Di Nucci, CPEng, FIEAust, NERNational Engineering RegisterMy Certified Skills



I have 25+ years of experience in safety engineering and consultancy. I've worked on aircraft, ships, submarines, air-traffic management systems, trains, and software. As an engineer and consultant, I've served on tiny projects and some of the biggest programs in the world.



I have worked in the UK and Australia, and on several projects, I've introduced American-made systems to both countries. It has been my privilege to teach safety to hundreds of people in the classroom. And I've presented on safety topics at several international conferences. See my full resume/CV here.



Our Mission and Values



artisan/ˈɑːtɪzan,ɑːtɪˈzan/Learn to pronounce noun



A worker in a skilled trade, especially one that involves making things by hand. “street markets where local artisans display handwoven textiles, painted ceramics, and leather goods”.



When I was choosing a name for my business, I thought of quite a lot of alternatives. I settled on The Safety Artisan for three reasons. First, I liked the meaning of the word. An individual pursuing their craft and trying to do it to the very best of their abilities.



Second, I liked the application. I’ve worked on a lot of very large, even multi-billion-dollar projects; but we’re still knowledge workers. We’re still individuals who must be competent to deliver good results for people.



And third, I liked the idea. Imagine a cottage industry of artisans working at home, delivering goods and services that other people can use wherever they are. Right now, you might be home or you might be on your mobile phone listening to this.



So, I liked all three of those things. I thought, yes, that’s what I’m about. That’s what I believe in and want to do. Does that sound good to you, too? Then check out The Safety Artisan's Topics, where I provide #safety #engineering #training.



Simon Di Nucci https://www.safetyartisan.com/about/

Tuesday, August 5, 2025



Topics

Here are the main topics taught by The Safety Artisan. Each page will take you to several teaching videos and other resources. Go to the Connect page to see how you can get updates every time a video or resource is added.



Start Here



Start here if you are new to safety! The posts featured on this page introduce basic safety topics, such as definitions and fundamental safety concepts. You can also start here if you know how to do safety in one industry and want to understand how it's done in another. Similarly, you might be familiar with safety practices in one country but want to know how things are done elsewhere.



Topics: System Safety Assessment



In this series of posts, we take you through a suite of safety analysis tasks. They are designed to deal with a complex system, but can be simplified (known as ‘tailoring’). We start with Preliminary Hazard Identification and work through detailed analyses, each with a different point of view of the system.



Topics: Work Health and Safety



Australian Work Health & Safety law, or WHS, addresses both design and workplace, or occupational, safety.  It imposes duties upon designers, manufacturers, and importers of plant, structures, and substances.



Not finding what you are looking for? Please head over to the Connect Page and tell us what you need.



Simon Di Nucci https://www.safetyartisan.com/topics/

Monday, August 4, 2025



Software Safety Assurance

Software Safety Assurance is the fourth in a new series of six blog posts on Principles of Software Safety Assurance. In them, we look at the 4+1 principles that underlie all software safety standards. (The previous post in the series is here.)



Read on for These Benefits...



This post deals with some crucial software assurance topics: what is it? what does it mean? I add further explaining some key topics, based on my wide experience in the industry since 1994.



There are some important case studies here. They add depth and diversity to those already presented in previous posts. This post also addresses the crucial issues of diverse assurance techniques, as no one approach is likely to be adequate for safety significant software.



Content



We outline common software safety assurance principles that are evident in software safety standards and best practices. You can think of these guidelines as the unchanging foundation of any software safety argument because they hold true across projects and domains.



The principles serve as a guide for cross-sector certification and aid in maintaining comprehension of the “big picture” of software safety issues while evaluating and negotiating the specifics of individual standards.



Software Assurance = Justified Confidence



Principle 4+1:



The confidence established in addressing the software safety principles shall be commensurate to the contribution of the software to system risk.‘The Principles of Software Safety Assurance’, RD Hawkins, I Habli & TP Kelly, University of York.



All safety-related software systems must adhere to the four aforementioned principles. To prove that each of the guiding principles has been established for the software, evidence must be presented.



Depending on the characteristics of the software system itself, the dangers that are present, and the principle that is being shown, the proof may take many different forms. The strength and quantity of the supporting evidence will determine how confidently or assuredly the premise is established.



Therefore, it's crucial to confirm that the level of trust developed is always acceptable. This is frequently accomplished by making sure that the level of confidence attained corresponds to the contribution the software makes to system risk. This strategy makes sure that the areas that lower safety risk the most receive the majority of attention (when producing evidence).



This method is extensively used today. Many standards employ concepts like Safety Integrity Levels (SILs) or Development Assurance Levels (DALs) to describe the amount of confidence needed in a certain software function.



Examples



The flight control system for the Boeing 777 airplane is a Fly-By-Wire (FBW) system ... The Primary Flight Computer (PFC) is the central computation element of the FBW system. The triple modular redundancy (TMR) concept also applies to the PFC architectural design. Further, the N-version dissimilarity issue is integrated into the TMR concept.



Details are given of a 'special case procedure' within the principles' framework which has been developed specifically to handle the particular problem of the assessment of software-based protection systems. The application of this 'procedure' to the Sizewell B Nuclear Power Station computer-based primary protection system is explained.



Suitability of Evidence



Once the essential level of confidence has been established, it is crucial to be able to judge whether it has been reached. Several factors must be taken into account when determining the degree of confidence with which each principle is put into practice.



The suitability of the evidence should be taken into consideration first. The constraints of the type of evidence being used must be considered too. These restrictions will have an impact on the degree of confidence that can be placed in each sort of evidence with regard to a certain principle.



Examples of these restrictions include the degree of test coverage that can be achieved, the precision of the models employed in formal analysis approaches, or the subjectivity of review and inspection. Most techniques have limits on what they can achieve.



Due to these limitations, it could be necessary to combine diverse types of evidence to reach the required degree of confidence in any one of the principles. The reliability of each piece of evidence must also be taken into account. This takes into account the degree of confidence in the item of evidence's capacity to perform as expected.



This is also frequently referred to as evidence rigor or evidence integrity. The rigorousness of the technique employed to produce the evidence item determines its reliability. The primary variables that will impact trustworthiness are Tools, Personnel, Methodology, Level of Audit and Review, and Independence.



The four software safety principles will never change. However, there is a wide range of trust in how those principles are developed. We now know that a determination must be made regarding the degree of assurance required for any given system's principles to be established. We now have our guiding principle.



Since it affects how the previous four principles are put into practice, this concept is also known as Principle 4+1.



Software Safety Assurance: End of Part 4 (of 6)



This blog post is derived from ‘The Principles of Software Safety Assurance’, RD Hawkins, I Habli & TP Kelly, University of York. The original paper is available for free here. I was privileged to be taught safety engineering by Tim Kelly, and others, at the University of York. I am pleased to share their valuable work in a more accessible format.



Meet the Author



My name’s Simon Di Nucci. I’m a practicing system safety engineer, and I have been, for the last 25 years; I’ve worked in all kinds of domains, aircraft, ships, submarines, sensors, and command and control systems, and some work on rail air traffic management systems, and lots of software safety. So, I’ve done a lot of different things!



Principles of Software Safety Training



Learn more about this subject in my course 'Principles of Safe Software' here. The next post in the series is here.



My course on Udemy, 'Principles of Software Safety Standards' is a cut-down version of the full Principles Course. Nevertheless, it still scores 4.42 out of 5.00 and attracts comments like:



- "It gives me an idea of standards as to how they are developed and the downward pyramid model of it." 4* Niveditha V.



- "This was really good course for starting the software safety standareds, comparing and reviewing strengths and weakness of them. Loved the how he try to fit each standared with4+1 principles. Highly recommend to anyone that want get into software safety." 4.5* Amila R.



- "The information provides a good overview. Perfect for someone like me who has worked with the standards but did not necessarily understand how the framework works." 5* Mahesh Koonath V.



- "Really good overview of key software standards and their strengths and weaknesses against the 4+1 Safety Principles." 4.5* Ann H.

#bestsafetyassurance #howmuchdoessoftwareassurancecost #howmuchissoftwareassurance #justifiedconfidence #safetyassurancecourse #safetyassuranceinsoftwareengineering #safetyassurancetraining #safetyrelatedsoftware #safetysignificantsoftware #softwareassurance #softwareassurancebestpractices #softwareassurancecertification #softwareassurancelevel #softwareassuranceprocess #softwareassurancestandards #softwareassurancetraining #softwaresafetyassurance #softwaresafetyexamples #softwaresafetyrequirements #softwaresecurityassuranceprocessstartsfromwhichphase #softwaresystemsafety #suitabilityofevidence #whatissoftwareasurance

Simon Di Nucci https://www.safetyartisan.com/2022/11/09/software-safety-assurance/

Saturday, August 2, 2025



Work Health and Safety

Australian Work Health & Safety law, or WHS, addresses both safe design and workplace (occupational) safety.  It imposes duties upon designers, manufacturers, importers, and suppliers of plant, structures, and substances.



The four-lesson discount bundle, including Safe Design, is available here at a Discount!



WHS Law in Practice



WHS legislation is powerful and elegant, and it yields a lot of useful content, whether you are in an Australian jurisdiction or not. It is based on the UK’s approach to health and safety at work, but it has incorporated lessons learned from four decades of experience there.



In 2011, Safe Work Australia developed the model work health and safety (WHS) laws to be implemented across Australia. To become legally binding the Commonwealth, states and territories must separately implement them as their own laws. Safe Work Australia is responsible for maintaining the model WHS laws, but we don’t regulate or enforce them.Safe Work Australia



However, Australia’s federal system complicates the application of our laws. The Safety Artisan will attempt to cut through this complexity and explain the core concepts needed for practical success.



WHS Codes of Practice



Safe Work Australia notes that:



Model Codes of Practice are practical guides to achieving the standards of health and safety required under the model WHS Act and Regulations.Safe Work Australia



They also go on to say:



An approved code of practice applies to anyone who has a duty of care in the circumstances described in the code. In most cases, following an approved code of practice would achieve compliance with the health and safety duties in a jurisdiction’s WHS Act and Regulations.



Like regulations, codes of practice deal with particular issues and do not cover all hazards or risks that may arise. Health and safety duties require you to consider all risks associated with work, not only those risks that regulations and codes of practice exist for.



While approved codes of practice are not law, they are admissible in court proceedings. Courts may regard an approved code of practice as evidence of what is known about a hazard, risk or control and may rely on the relevant code to determine what is reasonably practicable in the circumstances.



We ignore these words at our peril!



Head back to the Topics Page for more safety training.



Simon Di Nucci https://www.safetyartisan.com/work-health-and-safety/

Wednesday, July 30, 2025



Home

The Safety Artisan gives you:



1. The flexibility that enables you to work and study2. Easy access to recorded classes to watch later3. Dynamic delivery based on practical experience



Learn safety engineering with me: a current industry professional with 25 years of experience.



Blog | Courses | Email



The Safety Artisan: Latest Articles



Free Lessons



How to Prepare for the CISSP Exam



System Safety Concepts & Principles



Risk Management 101



Safety Analysis Lessons



System Hazard Analysis (Mil-Std-882E) Course



System Requirements Hazard Analysis



Preliminary Hazard Identification



Software/Safety Lessons



Principles of Safe Software Course



Identify & Analyze Functional Hazards Course



System Safety Engineering Process



Testimonials



The way you teach this subject makes it comprehensible and part of an integral whole. It seems like your approach is rare (and valuable) in the world of System Safety.Thomas AnthonyDirector, Aviation Safety and Security ProgramViterbi School of EngineeringUniversity of Southern California



Understanding safety law can be difficult and, at times, confronting.  Thankfully, Simon has a knack of bringing clarity to complex legal requirements, using real work examples to help understanding.  I highly recommend Simon to any director or manager wanting to understand their legal obligations and ensure a safe workplace.Jonathan Carroll, Senior Leadership, Pacific National



Valuable information, Clear explanations, Engaging delivery, Helpful practice activities, Accurate course description, Knowledgeable instructor.Manuel Louie B. Santos, reviewing “Risk Management 101”



Explanation about the military standard was very interesting, because for the first time somebody talked about possible disadvantages.Henri Van Buren, reviewing “System Safety Risk Analysis Programs”



4,500+ Students on Udemy



200+ Reviews, scoring:



- Principles of Software Safety Standards (4.48 out of 5.00);



- How to Design a System Safety Program (4.08 out of 5.00);



- How to Prepare for the CISSP Exam (4.61 out of 5.00); and



- Risk Management 101 (4.39 out of 5.00).



Why Safety Engineering Training?



The world needs safety engineers - a lot of them. Everything we use needs to be designed, manufactured, supplied, transported, and so on, and we need to do that without causing harm.



So, there’s a lot of need for safety engineering training. Want a (well-paid) career as a safety engineer? Need to do a safety-engineering-related task or project?  Do you need to understand what your team is doing? Maybe you need to ask - or answer - the right questions in an interview.



There’s a lot of need for safety engineering skills, but they are difficult to get because training places are quite limited. Qualifications are expensive and take a long time to acquire.



I hope that by putting these lessons online, you’ll find them helpful. Who am I? Learn more.



It’s about Countering Fear – and Increasing Confidence



I decided to launch this site because I think there is a lot of fear around safety.  People worry about getting it wrong, and therefore sometimes that can result in poor behaviors or poor performance. They shy away from doing anything about safety rather than just doing what they can.



This is a shame because safety is often just structured common sense.



It’s an engineering discipline like any other. Except that we need to involve people other than engineers. We need to involve operators, maintainers, and regulators. We need to involve end-users. So it’s quite a social activity as well, which I’m afraid can be a challenge for some of us engineers!  (I’m as guilty of that as anybody else.) Nevertheless, there’s a lot we can do, and it isn’t as difficult as we think it is.



About the Author



learn more



Simon Di Nucci https://www.safetyartisan.com/

Reflections on a Career in Safety, Part 3 In 'Reflections on a Career in Safety, Part 3' I continue talking about different kinds o...