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UK Govt Office Admits Ability To Negotiate Billions in Cloud Spending Curbed By Vendor Lock-in
vendredi 5 avril 2024, 17:29 , par Slashdot
The UK government has admitted its negotiating power over billions of pounds of cloud infrastructure spending has been inhibited by vendor lock-in. From a report: A document from the Cabinet Office's Central Digital & Data Office, circulated within Whitehall, seen by The Register, says the 'UK government's current approach to cloud adoption and management across its departments faces several challenges' which combined result 'in risk concentration and vendor lock-in that inhibit UK government's negotiating power over the cloud vendors.'
The paper also says that if the UK government -- which has spent tens of billions on cloud services in the last decade -- does not change its approach, 'the existing dominance of AWS and Azure in the UK Government's cloud services is set to continue.' Doing nothing would mean 'leaving the government with minimal leverage over pricing and product options. 'This path forecasts a future where, within a decade, the public sector could face the end of its ability to negotiate favourable terms, leading to entrenched vendor lock-in and potential regulatory scrutiny from [UK regulator] the Competition and Markets Authority.' The document has been circulated under the heading 'UK Public Sector Cloud Marketplace.' It is authored by Chris Nesbitt-Smith, a CDDO consultant, and sponsored by CDDO principal technical architect Edward McCutcheon and David Knott, CDDO chief technical officer. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://news.slashdot.org/story/24/04/05/1529251/uk-govt-office-admits-ability-to-negotiate-billions...
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