Cisco offers cloud-based communications for agencies
Connecting state and local government leaders
Cisco’s FedRAMP-approved system integrates voice, video, desktop sharing and conferencing into one cloud-based platform.
Cisco Hosted Collaboration Solution for Government (HCS-G) is now approved under the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program for agency and federal contractor use.
The HCS-G system combines the company’s WebEx system for voice and voice conferencing with a whole host of other voice-over-IP products and services including desktop phones, instant messaging and smartphone connectivity.
Instead of needing to house communications system on premise, HCS-G provides a system that eliminates much of the administrative work for agencies, which in turn lowers costs.
“We are moving onto the cloud and still providing … the same functionality and capabilities,” said Andy Campbell, business development manager for government solutions at Cisco. “It’s very efficient for an agency to use a model like this because they get all of the capabilities, but they don’t have to do any of the administrative tasks,” he said.
The system includes Cisco Jabber, the company’s unified communications client application, to enable employees’ access to connect the instant messaging, presence, voice, video, voice messaging, desktop sharing and conferencing tools.
“We have taken a lot of the systems that were authorized with voice, video, instant messaging and conference systems and bundled them it all into a hosted collaboration system,” Dan Kent, Cisco’s U.S. public sector CTO and senior engineering director, told GCN. “We already have over a million phones deployed in the government, and this system will work on those phones as well.”
HCS-G meets the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s FIPS 140-2 standard for end-to-end encryption to keep communications services secure.
“We worked to minimize the risk of the overall system, but deliver the capabilities of the system in the way that the user can have the confidence to use it,” Kent said. “If the user has confidence that they can interact with the system, it means they will be more likely to actually use the tools to fulfill the mission of their agencies.”
HCS-G was officially authorized on Feb. 23 under the FedRAMP moderate baseline. The Department of Health and Human Services was the authorizing agency.
Cisco’s WebEx system received approval in 2016 and is currently in use at the Department of Commerce, the Census Bureau and HHS.
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