Google sues agency over Microsoft-only cloud deal
IDG News Service - Google and a reseller of its products have filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of the Interior after the agency solicited bids for cloud-based e-mail and messaging services specifying that bidders must use Microsoft products.
Google and Ohio-based reseller Onix Networking filed the lawsuit against the Interior Department on Friday in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. The contract, for up to $59.3 million over five years, tells bidders they must deploy Microsoft's Business Productivity Online Suite-Federal (BPOS) package to deliver the services.
The Microsoft requirement is "unduly restrictive of competition" and violates federal contracting law, Google and Onix said in their complaint. The DOI, despite promising to look at alternatives to the Microsoft package, issued an Aug. 30 request for bids constituting "a sole-source procurement that is arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, and otherwise contrary to law," the complaint said.
Google employees met with DOI officials to talk about their competing Google Apps product in mid-2009, the complaint said. In April of this year, two DOI officials told Google that its products did not meet the security requirements of the agency. The two agency officials declined to talk about the DOI's security requirements or review the security of Google's products, the complaint said.
The DOI's requirements for the contract specify that the products used must comply with security requirements in the U.S. Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA), the Google/Onix complaint said. Microsoft's BPOS-Federal product is not yet FISMA-certified, while Google's Apps for Government is, the complaint added.
Microsoft announced the BPOS-Federal product in February. The company said it planned to have FISMA certification by the end of this year.
The DOI determined that Microsoft's suite was the "only commercial product that satisfies every requirement" identified by the agency, the DOI said in its justification for a so-called limited source contract. "Based on ... extensive market research, the department determined that although many companies can provide messaging services in general, they either cannot provide services that address the complexity of messaging requirements within DOI, or they could not meet the degree of security required by DOI," the agency said in documents defending the selection of Microsoft products.
BPOS-Federal is a new product with no publicly identified customers and no case studies from federal government users, Google's complaint said. Microsoft's BPOS-Standard product had service outages in August and September, the complaint added.
The DOI's public affairs office did not immediately respond to a request for comments about the lawsuit.
Grant Gross covers technology and telecom policy in the U.S. government for The IDG News Service. Follow Grant on Twitter at GrantGross. Grant's e-mail address is grant_gross@idg.com.
- The 20 Best iPhone/iPad Games of 2013 So Far
- 9 Steps to Build Your Personal Brand (and Your Career)
- 7 Consumer Technologies Coming to an Enterprise Near You
- 11 Signs Your IT Project is Doomed
- A walking tour: 33 questions to ask about your company's security
- 15 social media scams
- The 7 elements of a successful security awareness program
This IT pilot fish at a government agency gets a call from the administrative officer, who's on the verge of hysterics: Her computer is dead, she's having a total meltdown, and it's all his fault.
- IT Certification Study Tips
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Study Tip guide and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, cheat sheets, product reviews and more.
- Federal IT Innovation Caught in a Catch-22
- Fed resources shoring up old infrastructure, holding back new technologies.
- Harness IT -- An Introduction to Business Intelligence Solutions
- Learn the key selection criteria required to provide your organization with the capability to address structured data, unstructured data and mobile demands so...
- Business Intelligence Shows its Smarts
- Today's Business Intelligence (BI) tools provide a new way to think about data with self-service capabilities and user-friendly analytics that can be used...
- Proactive Planning for Big Data
- Big data is less about the terabytes and more about the query tools and business intelligence needed to make sense of massive amounts...
- Inquiry Spotlight: Consumer-Facing Identity
- The challenges of consumer-facing identity management, access management, and authentication differ in ways subtle and dramatic from those of the employee-facing variety. All Government IT White Papers
- Becoming An Analytics Driven Organization
- Join us on Tuesday, June 18, 2013, 11:00 AM EDT and learn how your agency can create an analytics culture that will enable...
- 3 Reasons Why Sepaton is the World's Fastest Backup Solution
- Leading analyst, Storage Switzerland learns how Sepaton backs up and deduplicates massive data volumes while maintaining the industry's fastest performance - all in...
- Enterprise File Sharing: All You Need to Know
- Security. Scalability. Control. These are just some of the many benefits of enterprise cloud file-sharing that you'll discover in this KnowledgeVault, packed with...
- Bridging HTTP and FTP with FileXpress Internet Server
- What if you could take an FTP server on your internal network, and allow external users (partners or customers) to securely access it...
- MFT and FileXpress - An Overview
- Business users and applications exchange files on a regular basis. File transfer is a core part of the flow of business activity. All Government IT Webcasts
