Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: December 20, 2019
Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) has received provisional authorization from the Department of Defense to allow its Azure cloud infrastructure-as-a-service offering to host secret classified data for 90 days, Nextgov reported Thursday.
Christopher Sherwood, a spokesman for DoD, told the publication the Defense Information Systems Agency issued on Dec. 12 the authorization permitting Microsoft to operate Azure IaaS at Impact Level 6. Amazon Web Services also holds IL6 accreditation.
The three-month period will be available for pilot projects to ensure policies, processes, and procedures are developed and tested before a longer [provisional authority] will be considered, Sherwood added.
Sherwood said the temporary authority is wholly separate from the potential 10-year, $10B Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure cloud computing contract the Pentagon awarded to Microsoft in October.
Client Solution Architects has appointed Ellen Barletto as chief growth officer, expanding her leadership responsibilities after nearly two decades with…
Brian Meyer, federal field chief technology officer at Axonius Federal, said cybersecurity asset management could help government agencies make dozens…
“Technology transformation company Red River has acquired Invictus International Consulting to expand its cybersecurity and enterprise modernization capabilities to support…
Synergy ECP, a software engineering, cybersecurity and systems engineering services provider, has acquired NetServices, a company offering secure, mission-focused technology services. The…