Public Policy Blog
Updates on technology policy issues
Bringing federal IT into the cloud
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Posted by Harry Wingo, Policy Counsel
The cloud improves security. The cloud saves taxpayer dollars. The cloud makes government more efficient.
That’s the message Mike Bradshaw, Director of Google Federal, will take to the
House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
during today’s hearing on federal IT and cloud computing.
Mike’s testimony will highlight three main points:
First, cloud computing can provide improved security. Under legacy computing models, data is stored on local computers – this is the equivalent of keeping cash under your mattress. Storing data securely in the cloud is like keeping cash in a bank. (To learn more, check out our
Google Apps security whitepaper
.)
Second, the cloud can save taxpayer dollars. The
Brookings Institution
found that government agencies that switched to some form of cloud computing saw up to 50 percent savings. To put that in context, the federal government is currently spending $76 billion per year on IT, with $20 billion of that devoted to hardware, software and file servers.
Third, in addition to securing data and lowering costs, cloud computing can improve efficiency and collaboration in ways that are simply not possible under the legacy IT model. Millions of individuals, businesses, and governments are already enjoying these benefits. We’re beginning to see federal cloud initiatives and more robust pilot programs, and we support efforts like
FedRAMP
to accelerate the process.
You can read Mike’s full
written testimony here
, and we’ll be posting video of the hearing here soon.
Update:
Check out video of Mike's opening statement, below.
Brookings: Cloud computing can save govt agencies 25-50% in costs
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Posted by Harry Wingo, Policy Counsel
If someone told you that they had an idea that could help government agencies function more productively while also cutting IT costs up to 50%, wouldn’t you take them up on the offer? That’s the kind of promise cloud computing holds, and that was the topic of a
forum
I just attended at Brookings Institution this morning.
I had two take-aways:
First, Darrell West of Brookings released a
new paper
concluding that the government agencies who have adopted cloud computing solutions have generally seen “between 25 and 50 percent savings in moving to the cloud.” For the federal government, West concludes that “this translates into billions in cost savings, depending on the scope of the transition.”
Second, federal CIO
Vivek Kundra
(pictured right) spoke about his new plan to streamline federal government agencies’ certification of cloud computing services, by creating a “centralized certification” board designed to speed up federal cloud adoption.
Conrad Cross from the City of Orlando was on the panel this morning as well, talking about how his city reduced IT costs
by 60%
by using Google Apps. And the City of Los Angeles -- which
adopted Google Apps
a few months ago and expects to save millions of dollars a year -- makes a cameo in Brookings’ report.
We’re big believers that governments ought to make sure cloud computing is treated on a level playing field in procurement decisions, along with desktop and server-based computing. Brookings made several recommendations in their new paper on how policymakers can do that, and we hope Congress will take up their challenge.
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