HMRC ditches Microsoft for Google, sends data offshore
Tax doesn’t have to be taxing for US firm with inside track
Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) is the first major department to move to Google Apps, part of an apparent loosening of Microsoft’s stranglehold on the government’s software services.
The department will join the Cabinet Office and Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) in deploying the fluffy white stuff.
HMRC has 70,000 staff, and as such will be Whitehall’s first mass deployment of Google’s cloud services.
The Cabinet Office currently has 2,500 users on Gmail. The government said in March that Google Apps best met its user needs for the Cabinet Office and the Ministry of Fun (DCMS).
“Other solutions (e.g Microsoft 365) also scored highly, but the advanced collaboration and flexible working features of Google Apps were the best fit for our needs,” it said at the time.
David Fitton, head of public sector sales for Google UK, wrote on Linkedin:
“The acceptance by HMRC that they can store OFFICIAL information offshore in Google data-centres represents a major change and endorsement of Google’s approach to managing sensitive information.”
If other departments follow suit, this could spell the beginning of the end for Microsoft’s monopoly on public sector software services, but rivals shouldn’t hold their breath.
Last week the UK government decided it could do without extended support for Windows XP.
However, not all departments and agencies have yet moved from the out-of-support OS. In a blog post the Government Digital Service said there has been “good progress” in moving away from Windows XP.
Ironically, HMRC is the same department tasked with implementing the so-called Google