Technically News - 5/13

Technically News scans thousands of industry articles to present you with a weekly source of IT news, information, and ideas that impact the public sector.

Obama Orders Agencies to Make Data Open, Machine-Readable

On Thursday, President Obama made “open and machine-readable” data formats a requirement for all new government IT systems, including those being updated. This effort is an extension of President Obama’s earlier efforts, including Data.gov, to create greater transparency and innovation through technology. ARS Technica has the summary.

Fixing Flaws in Federal Government IT Security

Karen Evans, the government’s former top IT officer, and Franklin Reeder, a onetime top executive in the White House Office of Management and Budget, recently wrote a paper called, “Measuring What Matters: Reducing Risk by Rethinking How We Evaluate Cybersecurity.” GovInfo Security has an interview with them about their paper that covers: How their approach differs from FISMA; and why audits deal with compliance, and not cybersecurity.

Hearing Set to Probe Data Center Progress

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee’s Government Operations Subcommittee has scheduled a field hearing to review the Federal Data Center Consolidation Initiative’s progress. Under the watch of the Office of Management and Budget (and a collective from 24 agencies), around 1,200 of an estimated 2,900 government data centers is to be closed or consolidated by 2015. The hearing will center on a new Government Accountability Office report. FCW postulates about the potential topics for review.

Amazon Web Services Leading Cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service App Development

Using the Magic Quadrant for Cloud Infrastructure as a Service, 2012 as the baseline, Forbes showed that Amazon Web Services (AWS) was “57.1% of inquiry share worldwide for application development during the 4th quarter of 2012.” AWS even gained 10% inquiry compared to other vendors from 2011 to 2012. Read Forbes’ full story here.

Driving Better Governance with Open Source

Open Source, once thought of as a hobby and too unsecure for government use, has become a staple of government IT. Future Gov has an interview with Red Hat’s Vice President for Corporate Affairs & Global Public Publicity, Mark Bohannon, about this change. “Owing not only to the benefits of the technology, but also to the benefits of the collaborative innovation model, Open Source software has by any measure become mainstream and vital to enterprise and government IT architecture,” he said.

The Fully-Secure Quantum Internet System

Ever imagine a perfectly secure internet, absent of hackers and cyberattacks? The Los Alamos National Labs may have made it into a reality. The “quantum internet system” works by utilizing hub servers instead of computer-to-computer networks. Quantum cryptology changes the message once it’s observed, ensuring safe digital communications. Wired has the scoop.