Amazon building new 'secret' cloud for CIA...
AMAZON WEB SERVICES ANNOUNCES SECRET CLOUD REGION FOR CIA
CIA's Cloud is 'Pretty Close' to Invincible, CIO Says
By Frank Konkel 10:00 AM ET
Amazon Web Services unveiled a cloud computing region for
the CIA and other intelligence community agencies developed specifically to
host secret classified data.
The AWS Secret Region will allow the 17 intelligence
agencies to host, analyze and run applications on government data classified at
the secret level through the company’s $600 million C2S contract, brokered
several years ago with the CIA. AWS already provides a region for the
intelligence community’s top secret data.
“Today we mark an important milestone as we launch the
AWS Secret Region,” said Teresa Carlson, vice president of AWS Worldwide Public
Sector. “AWS now provides the U.S. intelligence community a commercial cloud
capability across all classification levels: unclassified, sensitive, secret
and top secret. "The U.S. intelligence community can now execute their
missions with a common set of tools, a constant flow of the latest technology
and the flexibility to rapidly scale with the mission.”
The AWS Secret Region is essentially its own commercial
data center air-gapped—or shut off—from the rest of the internet. CIA Chief
Information Officer John Edwards views the new region as a key step in
commercial cloud computing technology that has already changed the way the IC
handles data and addresses cybersecurity.
In addition to hosting, storing, analyzing and allowing
various applications to ingest classified data, AWS also stood up an IC
Marketplace, which allows intelligence agencies to download, test and buy
software from companies based in Silicon Valley and elsewhere. Cloud computing,
Edwards said, is game-changing technology that provides a constant stream of
innovation and is more secure than the CIA’s own internal data centers.
“The AWS Secret Region is a key component of the intel community's
multi-fabric cloud strategy. It will have the same material impact on the IC at
the Secret level that C2S has had at Top Secret,” Edwards said in a statement.
Establishing Cloud Dominance?
Amazon Web Services is the most profitable division of
business giant Amazon, and it is recognized as the dominant private-sector
commercial cloud services provider, serving major customers like Netflix. AWS
further signaled its intent to corner the growing $8.5 billion federal cloud
computing market in opening a new East Coast corporate headquarters in Fairfax
County and unveiling a new computing region for government customers. The
company also recently announced it can host the Defense Department’s most
sensitive, unclassified data.
The AWS Secret Region strengthens AWS’ position as “a
dominant player” in the federal cloud computing market, according to Katell
Thielemann, research vice president at Gartner, Inc.
The Defense Department, which spends some $40 billion on
IT each year, has the most unlocked potential in cloud computing spend, and
AWS, Microsoft and IBM each have early contracts in place to serve military
agencies.
The AWS Secret Region will also be available to
non-intelligence community agencies with appropriate secret-level network
access, like military agencies, according to an AWS official, but they would
have to use their own contract vehicles and not the C2S contract.
Thielemann said the secret region is likely to entice new
customers who favor speed to market and rapid innovation. It will also be
attractive for agencies with large mixtures of both secret and top secret data.
“One of the big things is that AWS has had an impact with
regard to the ability of organizations under the IC umbrella to better share
information,” Thielemann said. “They have an ability to bring new tools into
the environment that were very difficult to adopt previously—things like
geospatial tools, advanced analytics and data dissemination. What is compelling
about cloud environments and the reason why the rest of the world has ran to
them is that once you’re in these more modern platforms, you’re no longer
beholden to a hardware-centric view of the world.”
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