This article is an excerpt from GovLoop’s recent guide, “Solving the Cloud Conundrum: Security, Procurement, Workforce.” Download the full guide here.
Agencies want the best of both worlds when it comes to IT. Sometimes cloud is the answer, such as when governments need to accommodate increased web traffic for election night. At other times, legacy IT is too costly or critical to operations for agencies to replace.
Fortunately, hybrid clouds bridge the gap between legacy and modern IT systems by combining data from both. For instance, agencies can use information from their on-premise systems for public-facing apps in the cloud. The services that these apps deliver – such as digital registration forms for driver’s licenses – function the same for users regardless of the IT involved.
Data security is one of the reasons that hybrid clouds are increasingly attractive to agencies. For example, intelligence agencies handle classified information and must meet stringent security requirements to protect sensitive data. Although cloud can benefit these organizations, agency leaders may want ownership of on-premise IT systems containing sensitive data. “Security requirements are not optional for government – they’re statutory,” Psaki said. “The stringent security requirements for their IT systems remains in effect whether they are in the cloud or not.”
Pure Storage helps agencies create the hybrid cloud that’s best for their unique mix of legacy and modern IT. The data stored in both on-premise and cloud environments operates with the same reliability for agencies and citizens. “What people have discovered is that one architecture does not fit all,” Psaki said. “Whether you have data on-premise, in cloud, or both at the same time, Pure Storage’s systems are inherently built to provide the type of architecture that agencies’ applications need.”