Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: March 23, 2018
AT&T (NYSE: T) has won a potential 10-year, $3.3 billion contract to provide information technology support services for the National Security Agency, Nextgov reported Wednesday.
AT&T submitted a $2.55 billion bid for the Regional Infrastructure Services I contract and was selected by NSA for exceeding the requirements in several areas such as technical services, enterprise management services and integration, according to redacted documents released Tuesday by the Government Accountability Office.
The contract is the second of the three Greenway technology contracts awarded by NSA as part of the classified Groundbreaker program.
The report said the Groundbreaker program was introduced in 2001 to provide NSA a platform to outsource its IT operations.
DXC Technology (NYSE: DXC) also competed for the Regional Infrastructure Services I contract with a $1.79 billion bid, according to the redacted version of GAO’s bid protest decision.
Elsevier highlights growing impact of geopolitical tensions on research Governments face tension between security priorities and open science goals AI…
Deltek’s 2026 GovCon Clarity Report found contractors accelerating operations and AI adoption while struggling to maintain profitability and control. Kevin…
Quiet Professionals, Spathe Systems rebrand as Endurion. New platform combines intelligence, operations and mission technology support. Endurion launches following recent…
John Roese, global chief technology officer and chief artificial intelligence officer at Dell Technologies, said government agencies seeking to advance…
Stockholders of semiconductor foundry SkyWater Technology have approved the company’s merger with quantum computing company IonQ. Quantum computing and post-quantum…