Google, Oracle, Amazon And Microsoft Jointly Win US DoD Cloud Contract Worth $9B

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  • The Pentagon has split a six-year $9 billion contract for cloud computing services among Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGLGoogleOracle Corp (NYSE: ORCL), Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) and Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ: MSFT).

  • The U.S. Department of Defense's move came a year after scrapping a previous contract marred by accusations of political interference by the administration of former U.S. President Donald Trump and bogged down by legal challenges, the Financial Times reports.

  • The Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability succeeded the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (Jedi), which aimed to build a large common commercial cloud for the entire DoD.

  • The Trump administration wanted to concentrate the cloud computing program under one provider.

  • The project is estimated to be completed by June 2028.

  • The DoD initially awarded Microsoft the contract in October 2018, but legal challenges delayed its implementation.

  • Last summer, the Pentagon canceled the initial Jedi contract.

  • Amazon had charged Trump with exploiting his animosity against Jeff Bezos.

  • Oracle said the single-vendor contract was unfair, while Google had withdrawn its bid in 2018 following a staff outcry for working with the DoD.

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