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Microsoft BPOS Meets Federal Security Standards

In November Microsoft received authorization for its datacenters based on FISMA requirements. Now BPOS-Federal can be used in those datacenters.

Microsoft announced this week that its Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) was authorized for government use after the cloud-based apps met Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) standards.

Government IT systems must meet security certification and accreditation standards specified by the 2002 FISMA law (PDF). BPOS Federal received an "authorization to operate" clearance from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

"The certification and accreditation has resulted in an official 'Authorization to Operate' (ATO) issued on April 19 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) for Microsoft's Business Productivity Online Services-Federal, which includes Exchange Online, SharePoint Online, and Office Communications Online," a Microsoft blog explains.


Microsoft had received authorization for its datacenters in November based on FISMA requirements. However, it had lacked such authorization for its hosted applications that ran in those datacenters. Now, with the added authorization, the way is cleared for BPOS-Federal applications to be rolled out to 120,000 USDA employees.

Still, a legal tussle could dog Microsoft along the way -- at least in terms of obtaining some government contracts. A lawsuit filed by Google in October against the U.S. Department of Interior alleges that Google was excluded from competitive-bidding contract considerations when Microsoft won a BPOS-Federal contract with that government organization.

Microsoft has since returned fire. Earlier this month, a Microsoft attorney asserted that Google Apps for Government lacks FISMA certification. However, the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), which issues FISMA certification and accreditation approvals, weighed in, stating that Google Apps Premier was "FISMA compliant in July of 2010" and that Google Apps for Government uses the same controls. The GSA currently is just assessing some added security controls in the Google Apps for Government suite.

Microsoft will update its BPOS line of hosted applications with a new offering called "Office 365," which is currently available for testing as a beta release. Microsoft expects to roll out Office 365 services commercially sometime this summer. After that commercial release, Microsoft plans "to pursue FISMA certification and accreditation for Office 365," according to Microsoft's blog post.


About the Author

Kurt Mackie is online news editor, Enterprise Group, at 1105 Media Inc.

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