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Dell’s Government CTO: Project Fort Zero Ready For DoD Testing – CRN


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O’Ryan Johnson


‘We feel comfortable that we have met the 152 objectives that the government has given us to meet,’ project lead and Dell Technologies industry CTO of Government Herb Kelsey tells CRN. ‘We feel comfortable about that. But we won’t know truly how close we are until they come and give us the test.’



Herb Kelsey

Herb Kelsey

Dell Technologies’ Project Fort Zero — which promises a step-by-step, vendor-by-vendor validated way to create a security stack that meets all 152 requirements laid down by the U.S. Department of Defense zero trust strategy — is ready for its close up, said project lead and Dell Industry CTO of Government Herb Kelsey.

“We feel comfortable that we have met the 152 objectives that the government has given us to meet,” he told CRN. “We feel comfortable about that. But we won’t know truly how close we are until they come and give us the test.”

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The timing of the test, which will grade Fort Zero’s performance across all of those objectives, is up to the Department of Defense.

“We still have the indication that it’s going to be in this calendar year, this fall,” Kelsey said. “We are still at their disposal, for when they want to do the evaluation. So we continue to do our testing. We continue to do our documentation, continue to talk with customers to get them excited and one day we’ll get a knock on the door.”

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Fort Zero was introduced this past May at Dell Technologies World. Dell said the project is an ecosystem of more than 30 technology company partners that aims to satisfy the DoD’s zero trust strategy.

Gary McConnell, CEO of VirtuIT Systems, a Nanuet, N.Y.-based Dell platinum partner, said Fort Zero could be a security differentiator. The goals of zero trust, he said, are sophisticated technologically, and require a deep understanding of an ever-evolving security stack. Fort Zero promises to simplify that for partners and customers.

“We’re in the security era, which has brought so many different players to the industry from endpoints all the way to data center and network,” he said. “The challenge with that has been identifying the appropriate solution or partner for each security layer. We see this as a way to mitigate those challenges while being able to integrate well within a customer’s existing tech stack.”

First published in November, the DoD guide supplies technologists with strategies to build zero trust environments, including documenting what is required for concept development, gap analysis, implementation, procurement and deployment of a zero trust system.

“Importantly, this document serves only as a strategy, not a solution architecture,” wrote DoD CIO John B. Sherman in the forward of the document. “Zero Trust Solution Architectures can and should be designed and guided by the details found within this document.”

Kelsey said the Dell team has been working closely with DoD leaders to develop Project Fort Zero, but he doesn’t yet have a date when it will debut. Last year Dell unveiled its Zero Trust Center of Excellence at the U.S. Cyber Command’s cybersecurity innovation center, known as Dreamport. Dell is providing the facility with a secure data center to validate zero-trust use cases before they are deployed into live environments.

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“We’re very close. Over the last 18 months we’ve been working hand in hand with the DoD and their CIO’s office and the office that supports the zero-trust platform,” he said. “We meet with them on a regular basis. Our team has been a trusted observer of what the government is doing, and we’ve done our design work and our build work and our testing work at the facility in Dreamport.”

Kelsey also talked with CRN about the role that generative AI will play in future zero-trust environments and why old data is getting a new value and a fresh look in the age of GenAI.

 

O’Ryan Johnson

O’Ryan Johnson is a veteran news reporter. He covers the data center beat for CRN and hopes to hear from channel partners about how he can improve his coverage and write the stories they want to read. He can be reached at ojohnson@thechannelcompany.com..




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