EBS and Applications

The Application Licensing Mistakes Auditors Find

Oracle auditors find the same application licensing mistakes again and again, from uncleaned user lists to miscounted multiplexing and ignored database exposure, and an independent line by line review of the resulting finding typically cuts the claim 60 to 80 percent. The buyer move is to fix these mistakes before any data leaves your organisation, because a clean position removes most of what an auditor would otherwise charge for.

What application licensing mistakes do auditors find most?

The application licensing mistakes auditors find most are uncleaned user lists, miscounted multiplexed users, ignored database exposure beneath the application, and misused restricted use licenses. These four account for the majority of application findings, and they share a feature: each inflates the licensable figure in a way that looks settled until someone checks it. Preliminary findings arrive at list price on top of these errors, which is why the headline number is almost always an opening position rather than a settled bill.

The full framework for counting and defending the application estate is in the Oracle license compliance guide. Recognising the common mistakes is the fastest way to see where your own exposure most likely sits.

The buyer takeaway

The same four mistakes drive most application findings. Fix them before you report anything and the finding shrinks before Oracle ever calculates it.

Why do uncleaned user lists inflate findings?

Uncleaned user lists inflate findings because the named user metric counts every authorized individual, so leavers who were never deprovisioned, duplicate accounts, and shared logins all sit inside the figure until they are removed. A list that has accumulated years of unmanaged access can carry a count far above the genuine population, and an auditor will license every account they find. The fix is mechanical but must happen before the count is reported, as set out in EBS user metrics and counting rules.

Multiplexing compounds this. When users reach the database through interfaces, bots or pooled connections, the count follows the people not the connection, and both undercounting and auditor overcounting are common. A clean map settles the figure, a discipline covered in interfaces, bots, and the user count.

Why is database exposure under applications missed?

Database exposure under applications is missed because teams focus on the application user count and forget that the Oracle Database storing the data carries its own separate licensing. Processor counting, options enabled by accident, and restricted use entitlements used beyond their permitted scope all live in that database layer, and they often hold the larger number. An application position that ignores the database is only half a position, and the missing half is usually the more expensive one.

How do you fix these mistakes first?

You fix these mistakes first by cleaning user lists, mapping every interface to its human population, counting the database independently, and confirming restricted use entitlements against your agreement, all before any data is submitted. Doing the work in that order is what lets an independent review cut an inflated finding 60 to 80 percent, because the corrections are already in place when the number is calculated rather than argued after the fact. A standing compliance review keeps the position clean so an audit never starts from a bad list.

Your next step

Application findings are large because the underlying mistakes are common and easy to leave unfixed, not because the exposure is real. A license compliance review finds and corrects these errors before Oracle can build a finding on them, and our guarantee is simple: we reduce your Oracle exposure or we reimburse our service fee. Get a quote for a buyer side review, or contact us to talk through your application estate.

Get a Quote

Request a scoped license compliance review, read the Oracle license compliance guide, or contact us to discuss your estate.

FAQ

Application mistake questions buyers ask first.

The most common are uncleaned user lists, miscounted multiplexed users, ignored database exposure under applications, and misused restricted use licenses, all of which inflate a finding that a line by line review can cut.
Independent line by line review of inflated Oracle findings typically cuts the claim 60 to 80 percent, because preliminary numbers arrive at list price before user lists and counting errors are corrected.
Yes. Cleaning user lists, mapping interfaces, and confirming database entitlements before any data leaves your organisation removes most of the exposure an auditor would otherwise find.
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