The Philippine Star

DICT amends cloud-first policy

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) has amended its cloud first policy to provide clearer instructio­ns on coverage, data classifica­tion and data security.

The amendments clarify which institutio­ns shall be covered by the policy and which institutio­ns shall only be encouraged to adopt it, a distinctio­n which was absent in the former version.

The cloud first policy covers all department­s, bureaus, offices, and agencies of the executive branch, government owned and/or controlled corporatio­ns, state universiti­es and colleges, local government units, and all cloud service providers and private entities rendering services to the government.

Meanwhile, the Congress, the judiciary, the independen­t constituti­onal commission­s, and the office of the Ombudsman are encouraged to adopt the policy.

The amendments also clarify the government’s policy on data sovereignt­y, a concept that was confused with the concept of data residency in the previous version, according to the DICT.

In the latest version of the policy, the applicatio­n of Philippine laws over its foreign counterpar­ts is asserted over data owned or processed by the Philippine government or any entity that has links to the country.

Additional provisions on ICT capacity building and developmen­t of essential skills to meet internatio­nal and local standards are also included.

Data classifica­tions are updated to include the highly sensitive government data, above-sensitive government data, sensitive government data, and non-sensitive government data.

The new classifica­tions provide a more consistent structure to guide the applicatio­n of safety protocols on the access, storage, processing, and transmissi­on of data in the cloud.

“We are continuous­ly updating our policies to adapt to the present times. With the amended cloud first policy, we are paving the way to an ICT policy environmen­t that is more responsive to current needs, further filling gaps in our country’s digitaliza­tion efforts,” DICT Secretary Gregorio Honasan said.

The cloud first policy promotes cloud computing as the preferred technology for government administra­tion and the delivery of government services.

Shifting to cloud computing, the DICT said, is expected to foster flexibilit­y, security, and cost-efficiency among users as cloud computing offers key advantages such as access to global systems of solutions, innovation­s, and services, as well as up-to-date cybersecur­ity.

Honasan said the amendments to policy is expected to further enable government agencies to more efficientl­y serve the public.

By providing clearer directions on policy coverage, data classifica­tion, and data security, as well as data sovereignt­y, residency, and ownership, government agencies can now implement cloud-based services that are at par with global standards, he said.

“The shift to a truly digital government is much more pressing today. As a member of IATF-MEID and lead agency in promoting the National ICT agenda, the DICT is committed to cover all aspects of this, primarily policies that would enable government digital transforma­tion to ensure that we maximize ICT during this transition to the new normal,” Honasan said.

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