The Challenges to State and Local Government
To fully reap the rewards of cloud, agencies must consider which cloud offering best fits their existing infrastructure investments, IT skill sets and management procedures
To fully reap the rewards of cloud, agencies must consider which cloud offering best fits their existing infrastructure investments, IT skill sets and management procedures
Partnered cloud and data center solutions offer federal agencies a way to meet the innovation demands of our digital era, without breaking budgets or overtaxing IT departments.
A GovLoop and Avaya survey of 81 federal employees illustrates why agencies are struggling with cloud and IT modernization.
Citizens want a user experience that rivals that of the private sector. In many cases, cloud supported these types of experiences.
In an interview with GovLoop, Mike Rohde, Deputy Chief Information Security Officer, Federal at ServiceNow, explained how cloud security requirements like FedRAMP give your organization’s data the protections it deserves.
Oakland County, Michigan is harnessing cloud’s power to help agencies federal, state and local agencies nationwide improve their technology and services.
Results from going to the cloud are apparent, but the long-term benefits will continue to show up in the communities that are being serviced, such as Puerto Rico.
How can government ensure effective security for cloud? Cloud security is a shared responsibility between the cloud provider and the agency.
An agency’s decision to move to cloud can be complicated if an agency doesn’t quite understand the implications of cloud on everyday operations.
Compliance automation is a new approach to achieve and maintain compliance. It uses code to automate the implementation, validation, remediation, monitoring and reporting of an agency’s security. It allows agencies to quickly deploy audit-ready environments that are pre-configured to meet compliance requirement