Ukraine Tech Chief: Cloud Migration ‘Saved Ukrainian Government and Economy’

“Russian missiles can’t destroy the cloud,” Ukraine’s minister of digital 
transformation explained.

Executive Editor, Nextgov  December 1, 2022 
https://www.nextgov.com/cxo-briefing/2022/12/ukraine-tech-chief-cloud-migration-saved-ukrainian-government-and-economy/380328/


LAS VEGAS—Last February, with Russian military forces bearing down on its 
nation, the Ukrainian government made the decision to migrate terabytes of 
critical government data to the cloud in an effort to preserve integral digital 
services for Ukrainians amid missile strikes and machine gun fire.

Amazon Web Services, an early partner with Ukraine, worked with a small action 
team of government officials to deliver three of its Snowball devices from 
Dublin to Ukraine through Poland during the early days of Russia’s invasion.

https://aws.amazon.com/snowball/

Each Snowball—an edge-computing device designed to transport data into and out 
of the cloud—is capable of storing up to 80 terabytes of data offline.

In the immediacy of Russian aggression, the Snowball emergency cloud migration 
proved critical to Ukraine’s continuity of government services, according to 
Ukraine’s Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Digital Transformation, Mykhailo 
Federov.

“AWS helped us in the very first days of the full-scale invasion,” Federov said 
Tuesday, speaking at AWS’ re:Invent conference in Las Vegas.

“AWS’ leadership made a decision that saved the Ukrainian government and 
economy.

The solution to save Ukrainian databases and state registers was cloud 
migration. What we like the most about this partnership with cloud companies is 
that Russian missiles can't destroy the cloud."

Federov added, “Let me be honest with you. This is priceless. State registers 
and databases are critical information infrastructure.”

Liam Maxwell, AWS’ director of government digital transformation, explained 
that a small team of “Amazonians” met with the ambassador at the Ukrainian 
embassy on the first day of the Russian invasion to identify “what we could 
help them back up, and that included things like the population register, land 
and property ownership, tax payment records, education records.”

“That laid the groundwork to build a strategic move to help the Ukrainian 
government and safeguard their digital infrastructure,” Maxwell said, speaking 
alongside Federov.

The cloud migration aided an existing Ukrainian tech effort to digitize 
government services through a smartphone application called Diia. Even as it 
continues defending itself against Russian forces, both on the battlefield and 
in cyberspace, Federov said Ukraine will soon unveil a digital mortgage 
service, and plans to continue digitizing its government.

“We experience cyberattacks on a daily basis, this is a cyberwar,” he said, 
before adding that Russia continues to threaten its energy infrastructure.

“Under attack is our critical infrastructure. But we have been successful in 
protecting [it], and every week we are launching some new public resources. 
Digitalization is the best response to this challenge.”

Maxwell demurred when asked by reporters whether AWS itself had experienced 
increased cyberattacks from Russia in retaliation for its assistance to Ukraine.

“We’ve had the ability to protect ourselves,” Maxwell said.

Maxwell and Federov used the conference to sign a memorandum of understanding, 
or MOU, to continue their budding partnership.

AWS is one of several U.S. tech companies, including Microsoft and Google, to 
receive a peace prize from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for their 
efforts in assisting the nation

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to