June 01, 2011
The federal government is "bullish" on prospects for using cloud and mobile technologies, although perhaps not at the expense of existing legacy infrastructure, federal CTO Aneesh Chopra said in an interview with InfoWorld last week.
During an appearance in Silicon Valley, Chopra, the nation's first-ever CTO, acknowledged the inevitable emergence of cloud and mobile as solutions for the federal government, but he sees them as supplementing rather than replacing legacy systems. He said, "I'm not so sure it's an either/or. I absolutely see the trend toward the combination of cloud and mobile as a very, very powerful asset to be mined for new capabilities that aren't yet online. It might very well be that legacy infrastructure will stay on its course, but new capabilities are introduced in a manner that takes advantage of cloud and mobile -- and we're very bullish on those prospects."
[ Tech vendors and trade groups praised the selection of Chopra in 2009. | Keep up with the latest developer news with InfoWorld's Developer World newsletter. | Follow Paul Krill on Twitter. ]
The federal government is pursuing cloud computing and has a team focused on security concerns related to it, Chopra said. "We want to make sure there are opportunities for all forms of cloud computing -- private clouds, hybrid clouds, commercial clouds -- and we've been engaged in the process."
Federal officials are talking with Microsoft, Google, HP, and others about breakthroughs in cloud computing. Chopra said, "My colleague [U.S. CIO Vivek Kundra] is managing the cloud-first policy for the adoption in the federal government, and that's on track and on plan." The government in its cloud pursuits seeks to get the industry to adopt technical standards for security, interoperability, and other capabilities, Chopra said.
Chopra has mapped out key IT priorities for his boss, President Barack Obama. "I have five priorities for the president. The first of those priorities is to modernize our digital infrastructure, emphasizing fourth-generation wireless technologies. Where that's progressing is we have a proposed bill the president called for in the State of the Union [address] that would liberate 500MHz of spectrum over the next 10 years."
The second priority, said Chopra, involves the Startup America program, emphasizing new market opportunities in health, energy, and education. "Number three, we're working on Internet policy principles. We've announced our support for a privacy bill of rights, so that obviously needs congressional review. [Also] the president released a cyber security plan. My responsibility in that is the R&D domain, and we will be publishing a broader Internet policy principles agenda later this summer," he said. The administration wants the private sector to voluntarily develop codes of conduct related to online privacy, enforceable by the Federal Trade Commission.
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