Saturday 3 September 2016

GDS, the data centre for government

"The Government Digital Service [GDS] is the digital, technology and data centre for government ... Over the next 5 years, together with departments, we will be building new digital, technology and data platforms for the whole of government ... We will make better use of data to drive continuous improvement, ensure government has the right technology and that spending is controlled".

That's what it says in the job description for a new head of service design required at GDS. You've got until 13 September 2016 to apply.

And that's not the only job available. GDS, the "data centre for government", also want data scientists to build new "data platforms for the whole of government" and to make "better use of data".

Some time in 2013, it's hard to establish when, GDS and Warwickshire County Council investigated the question of Interoperability between central and local government identity assurance schemes. The project was "conceived by Warwickshire County Council, a medium-sized local authority, and involved the participation of the Government Digital Service (GDS), a team within the UK Government’s Cabinet Office tasked with transforming government digital services, and three Identity Providers – Mydex, PayPal and Verizon".

Three years later, Mydex is no longer an "identity provider". Neither is PayPal. Nor is Verizon.

Five
One of their findings back then, under the heading Use of a Social Media ID (p.12), was that "most users would be very reluctant to use their social media accounts with a government site, the prevailing view being that their social life is distinctly separate to doing 'business' with government. The issue of privacy and the feeling that government would be able to 'see my social life', or that government transactions would appear in their social media profiles, was of concern. That said, some users saw the benefit in forms being pre-filled with details held within their social media account".

How did GDS come to this important conclusion?

Answer, the data centre for government asked five people: "User experience testing was performed in a laboratory environment and involved 5 users on a one-to-one basis with an experienced research facilitator provided by GDS".

12
Now roll forward three years. GOV.UK Verify (RIP) wasn't meant to go live until it could verify-the-identity-and-therefore-register at least 90% of applicants. The registration rate remains stubbornly below that figure at about 70%. Despite that huge disparity, the data centre for government which is supposed to use data to drive continuous improvement declared GOV.UK Verify (RIP) to be live in May 2016.

In order to improve the registration rate, GDS continue to give the remaining "identity providers" access to more and more of your personal information.

GDS's 25 July 2016 blog post,Can online activity history help GOV.UK Verify [RIP] work for more people?, tells us that they have returned their attention to your social media accounts, "Facebook, PayPal, LinkedIn and others".

They undertook a new project and guess what: "Compared to the findings from 2013-2014, our recent research suggests that people appear to be becoming more amenable to using online activity verification and allowing certified companies access to their personal online accounts to acquire a verified identity that gives safer, faster access to government services".

How much more amenable? How much safer? How much faster? The data centre for government doesn't say.

How did they reach this unquantified conclusion? "The user research involved 12 one-to-one sessions with users" and "We had 86 people, from across participating organisations, testing the service using their real online accounts".

Not exactly big data, is that enough data to support GDS's otherwise unquantified conclusion? The data centre for government doesn't say.

38%
What they do say is that "if activity from such accounts could be used for activity history, GOV.UK Verify [RIP]’s demographic coverage of the adult population overall could increase by 9%, and for the 16-25 demographic could see a potential increase of up to 38%".

Suddenly we're being fed some numbers to work with. But don't get your budding data scientist's hopes up. We have no idea how these numbers were computed. We have no idea how much confidence we can place in them ...

... except that we have been here before. On 25 January 2016, to be precise, when GDS published Estimating what proportion of the public will be able to use GOV.UK Verify [RIP]: "Looking at the overall population of UK adults, we found that at least 73% of over 16s and 78% of employed people are likely to have the evidence and footprint needed to verify their identity using GOV.UK Verify [RIP]. This will increase to at least 91% of employed people and at least 88% of over 16s by April 2016. By July, coverage will increase to 95% of employed people and 93% of over-16s".

The tool shows that by July coverage will increase to 95% of employed people

That didn't happen. There is no reason to believe that GDS's touted 38% improvement will happen either. Any data scientist who joins GDS has their work cut out.

----------

Updated 12:44

The blog post above has been updated since publication. Some links have been added. Also, the reference to 86 people from across participating organisations being involved in testing.

Frowned upon in the world of professional journalism, this iterative primping will be instantly recognisable to GDS as "agile blogging".


Updated 9.12.16

5:12 a.m. yesterday, the Government Digital Service (GDS) tweeted the claim: "Our Standards Assurance team announce savings of £339 million through spending controls".

Presumably to support that claim, GDS provide a link to a blog post, A problem shared is money saved. There, the £339 million figure is described as "confirmed" and we learn that the confirmed savings were made in 2015-16.

The figure is unaudited and we don't have a breakdown but GDS do provide a further link, to Government saves £18.6 billion for hard working taxpayers in 2014 to 2015. That's obviously too early to provide any support for 2015-16 savings but we do learn that savings are calculated by comparing the year's figures against the same figures for 2009-10: "The government made savings of £18.6 billion in 2014 to 2015 against a 2009 to 2010 baseline".

You might think that a saving is a saving. Not for GDS. Change the baseline and you'll get a different figure.

You might think it's hard to make savings. Not for GDS. Propose a £1 billion project and let the GDS spending controls people turn you down. Savings have immediately increased by £1 billion.

12:25 a.m. yesterday, the Cabinet Office tweeted happy fifth birthday to GDS and said: "5 years of government digital transformation has saved the taxpayer over £3.56 billion". The Cabinet Office do not cite any source for this figure. And what happened to the £18.6 billion figure?

12:57 a.m. this morning, Helen Olsen Bedford tweeted: "GDS claims £4 billion savings for government IT". She cites an article on the UKAuthority.com website, GDS claims £4 billion savings for government IT.

That article provides no source but it looks as if these figures are all coming from Stephen Foreshew-Cain's How digital and technology transformation saved £1.7bn last year. Mr Foreshew-Cain replaced Mike Bracken as executive director of GDS and has now himself been replaced by Kevin Cunnington. Last time we looked at Mr Foreshew-Cain's blog post on savings we said:
… And there is no audited support for the £4 billion figure. Elsewhere, we read "in many ways GDS has been a success story ... with a claimed £1.7 billion cost savings" (Helen Margetts). After reading Government unveils £14.3 billion of savings for 2013 to 2014, turn to p.4 of End of year savings 2013 to 2014: technical note and you'll find claimed savings of £91 million + £119 million = £210 million or, to put it another way, £0.21 billion. Not £4 billion. Not even £1.7 billion. Which figure, if any, is correct? More research required, Mr Rooney. And Ms Margetts …
Savings? Think of a number …
There has been no progress in the three years since Mike Bracken told the Americans that relevant savings equivalent to 1% of the UK's GDP had been made whereas, on inspection, the correct figure looked more like 0.0138%.

GDS's claims to have made savings remain confusing and therefore unconvincing ...

... and on that basis they are not the obvious candidate to be the "data centre for government". The data centre centre for government needs to provide information that is reliable and comprehensible. GDS's figures for savings are neither.

GDS, the data centre for government

"The Government Digital Service [GDS] is the digital, technology and data centre for government ... Over the next 5 years, together with departments, we will be building new digital, technology and data platforms for the whole of government ... We will make better use of data to drive continuous improvement, ensure government has the right technology and that spending is controlled".

That's what it says in the job description for a new head of service design required at GDS. You've got until 13 September 2016 to apply.

Saturday 27 August 2016

GDS & the banshees 3


The system is not set up to do stuff.
It’s set up, frankly,
to have an intellectual pissing match
around how its things should be.


On 1 August 2016 one man replaced another man as head of the Government Digital Service (GDS). Kevin Cunnington came. Stephen Foreshew-Cain left. People come and people go. It's not unusual but on this occasion there was an exorbitant keening and wailing and moaning from an international class of banshees.

The banshees failed to make it clear why they were upset. What would it matter if GDS had its terms of reference changed? Transformation begins at home. Come to that, what would it matter if GDS disappeared? The banshees couldn't tell us.

On or shortly before 5 July 2016, ex-Public Servant of the Year ex-Guardian man Mike Bracken MBE ex-CDO ex-CDO, ex-executive director of GDS and ex-senior responsible owner of the identity assurance programme now known as "GOV.UK Verify (RIP)", gave an interview to the Centre for Public Impact:



That's the interview in which Mr Bracken delivers himself of the opinion above, that Whitehall is set up for nothing more than "an intellectual pissing match" (around 11'16", see transcript).

On or shortly before 25 July 2016, there was another interview, this time involving not just Mike Bracken but also Francis-now-Lord "JFDI" Maude (around 8'18"), Mr Bracken's sometime political boss:



Where the banshees have failed, surely these two can explain what GDS has achieved and why it should continue to exist?

Let us for the moment resist the temptation to correct the scores of mistakes in the interviews.

The suggested answer to our questions about the value of GDS boils down to "internet era skills". Government must be reformed, it is alleged, to take advantage of the internet. Government needs more internet era skills.

What internet era skills? The ability like Google and Facebook to turn people's identity into money? Will we see GOV.UK adorned with advertisements? Will more and more government data disappear into internet era clouds, taken hostage by the likes of Amazon and Google?

Maybe. But those aren't the internet era skills Mike Bracken mentions.

What he's talking about is agile software engineering. Or even agile policy-making in Whitehall. Starting at around 19'00" in the 25 July 2016 interview, he asserts that GDS has deployed agile and that that cannot now be undone. Whitehall is henceforth agile. That won't change. It can't change. It's too late. Thanks to GDS there are now 10-15,000 people in Whitehall using agile and that's all they'll ever use, there's no going back to the bad old days.

With agile we will at last be able to make Government as a Platform work. That's the suggestion. No longer will taxpayers be "ripped off" by huge systems integrators. Instead, innovative small and medium-sized enterprises will deliver shared services cheaply and those services will meet users' needs.

Messrs Bracken and Maude are confident that GDS's agile legacy is here to stay. But Mr Bracken was ejected from Whitehall in September 2015, his successor Mr Foreshew-Cain only lasted nine ten months and Lord Maude is no longer in government. So the banshees have some reason not to share that confidence.

Never mind the fact that agile pre-dates the internet era. (To be more precise, never mind the fact that agile pre-dates the web era.)

And never mind the banshees. How about you? Do you believe that agile is the answer to everything?

Agile certainly didn't help the Rural Payments Agency (RPA), did it. Messrs Bracken and Maude argue that the RPA débâcle was the result of "sabotage" (22'31" onwards). Which implies to some people that, to make agile stick, GDS needs more power over the departments of state and their agencies. Are you happy with the idea of a centralised cadre of agile internet era persons with no experience of government having autocratic power over the rest of Whitehall?

While you're thinking about that, let's take a look at 100 rounds of user research on GOV.UK Verify [RIP], a post published on GDS's identity assurance blog on 2 August 2016:
100 rounds of usability testing is certainly a lot. Here are some numbers to put it into context:
  • 600 users
  • 600 hours in the lab
  • 500 hours of analysis
  • 200 hours of presenting results and prioritising issues
  • 30,000 sticky notes
And that’s not all: those 100 rounds are in addition to a range of other research we do: large scale remote usability testing, contextual research in users’ homes and job centres; customer support queries and feedback; analytics; A/B testing; accessibility testing ...
This is agile in action. This is what the banshees are keening for. This is what you are asked to grant GDS the power to impose on central and local government.

This is process. Get some users. Bang them up in the lab. Analyse what they say and do. Present the results to anyone else who's got a spare 200 hours. Write everything in felt tip on Post-it® Notes. That way you're doing your job.

GDS have become the thoughtless exponents of process. The fact that GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is a hopeless failure doesn't matter. Success isn't the point. The point is to follow the process.

"Here’s what GOV.UK Verify looked like in December 2012, before usability testing started", GDS tell us:


Cassidian have pulled out of GOV.UK Verify (RIP). So have Verizon. So have Mydex and Ingeus. And PayPal (not shown), they've pulled out twice. GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is being trounced by the venerable Government Gateway system – given the choice, that's what people in their millions use to interact with on-line government services, the Government Gateway, and not GOV.UK Verify (RIP).

And meanwhile, there's GDS iterating away in an "intellectual pissing match", doing "contextual research in users’ homes and job centres". They've become more like Whitehall than Whitehall.

One final question for you. Would you now give GDS £450 million?

----------

Updated 11:24

GDS's exclusive commitment to agile means that it is left with pathetically few methods to tackle the manifold diversity of the problems thrown up by the real world.

The US are said to have copied GDS when they set up USDS, "building a more awesome government through technology". Well things are moving on. “The tyranny of agile”, says Jennifer Pahlka in a not bad article, The Tyranny of Agile (hat tip: John Alty). "Never thought you’d hear me say that, did you?", she says, and she's right.

So the US has spotted the problem. So has local government in the UK, please see Socitm briefing warns over digital transformation “delusions”.

But GDS? Are they still hung up on agile? Kevin Cunnington, their new director general, is quoted in Bryan Glick's all-important 31 July 2016 Computer Weekly article as saying "we need to build services in an agile and collaborative way". Do we?

Mr Cunnington may want to put a little distance between himself and that unworldly safe space of agile when he finally addresses the public in his new GDS rôle.


Updated 2.1.17

Give GDS despotic power over the rest of Whitehall and they'll deliver public services quickly and cheaply. How? Using "agile" software engineering methodologies. That's what Mike Bracken said in the 25 July 2016 interview above.

Is he sure?

Yes, thousands of Whitehall staff have now been trained in agile techniques, the process has gone too far to be reversed, they will never use any other methodology. That's what Mike Bracken said.

That's why the banshees were keening. Agile. That's why GDS's terms of reference must never be changed. Internet era agile skills will perfect public administration.

An empty promise so far, it hasn't happened in the first five years of GDS. But it will. That's what Mike Bracken said. There is no alternative.

Except, what's this we now read?


So much for no-going-back. Whitehall IT failures in the ancien régime were all caused by the use of "waterfall" software engineering methodologies. That's what Mike Bracken said. Wrong again.

"Mr Cunnington may want to put a little distance between himself and that unworldly safe space of agile", we said back in August. It's almost as though he agrees.


Updated 2.3.17

It is six months since we noted that the Government Digital Service (GDS) follows process whether or not that delivers progress. 100 rounds of user testing had been conducted and yet GOV.UK Verify (RIP) was still dead.

Yesterday we learnt on Twitter that progress is at last being made: "If we continue at current rate we'll reach 200 rounds of research on @GOVUKverify by June 2018. There will definitely be cake and stickers!".


Updated 3.4.17

As noted above, in his ~25 July 2016 interview Mike Bracken declared his confidence in the legacy of the Government Digital Service (GDS). We paraphrased his words as follows: "GDS has deployed agile ... that cannot now be undone. Whitehall is henceforth agile. That won't change. It can't change. It's too late. Thanks to GDS there are now 10-15,000 people in Whitehall using agile and that's all they'll ever use, there's no going back to the bad old days .. With agile we will at last be able to make Government as a Platform work ... No longer will taxpayers be 'ripped off' by huge systems integrators".

Let's hope he's wrong. Please see Hundreds of millions 'wasted' on UK court digitisation scheme,
'Agile' Common Platform Programme is 'vapourware', say insiders.


Updated 15.9.17

12 September 2017, Francis-now-Lord Maude delivered a speech at Speaker's House on the future of the UK civil service.

In his speech, Lord Maude denounces the civil service. Officials lied to him, he says, they misinformed him and they disobeyed the instructions of their political masters. He lists a number of reforms that he attempted to institute. Some were blocked. The others, which worked, he says, have been reversed since he left office, most notably central spending controls.

These are serious charges. Lord Maude's speech is covered by the Times newspaper. There's nothing in the Telegraph. And nothing in the Guardian. Civil Service World magazine covers the speech ...

... and so does Computer Weekly magazine, GDS is ‘sidelined’ and government as a platform ‘is dead’, says Francis Maude. Perhaps if GDS had known something about government and something about the ultra-large scale IT systems required they could have provided Lord Maude with ammunition and failure could have been averted.

Maude-style success would have been represented by centralisation of the administration, standardisation and massive data-sharing. The UK could have been more like Singapore, he says in his speech, as though that is the ambition on everyone's lips over here. It isn't.

GDS & the banshees 3


The system is not set up to do stuff.
It’s set up, frankly,
to have an intellectual pissing match
around how its things should be.


On 1 August 2016 one man replaced another man as head of the Government Digital Service (GDS). Kevin Cunnington came. Stephen Foreshew-Cain left. People come and people go. It's not unusual but on this occasion there was an exorbitant keening and wailing and moaning from an international class of banshees.

The banshees failed to make it clear why they were upset. What would it matter if GDS had its terms of reference changed? Transformation begins at home. Come to that, what would it matter if GDS disappeared? The banshees couldn't tell us.

Monday 22 August 2016

GDS & the banshees 2


The system is not set up to do stuff.
It’s set up, frankly,
to have an intellectual pissing match
around how its things should be.


On 1 August 2016 one man replaced another man as head of the Government Digital Service (GDS). Kevin Cunnington came. Stephen Foreshew-Cain left. People come and people go. It's not unusual but on this occasion there was an exorbitant keening and wailing and moaning from an international class of banshees.

St Sebastian
Captain of the Praetorian Guard
Roman Soldier, Healer, Martyr
One minute GDS was Icarus, then Dreyfus, then Turing. How long before St Sebastian makes an entrance? "Hyperbole? No" (Derek du Preez, banshee).

What was all the fuss about? GDS's staff of 700 (Helen Margetts, banshee and GDS advisory board member?) have been promised £450 million to spend on unspecified government IT projects between now and 31 March 2020.

That looks quite confidence-inspiring, you might think, but the banshees fear that the organisation will (a) be closed down or (b) have its terms of reference changed.

Suppose the nervous banshees are right. Suppose that (a) or at least (b) is about to happen. So what? The banshees are surprisingly bad at explaining why that would be a disaster. What are they so upset about?

"Recently my car's tax had run out ... In the bad old days, renewing your tax disc was that special kind of hell – government hell. Filling in forms, finding obscure bits of paper ... and then queueing for the duration of the Pliocene epoch at a post office ... But online it took but minutes ... That service was just one of many built in part, or full, by a quite remarkable team, the world-beating Government Digital Service ..." (Ben Rooney, banshee).

More research required, Mr Rooney. The UK has had on-line car tax renewal since at least September 2005, six years before GDS existed.

Car tax cannot be the reason for Mr Rooney's banshee distress. Maybe it's more about money? Mr Rooney adds: "the team ... has saved the taxpayer £4billion in direct costs and an almost incalculable amount in indirect costs".

What are we supposed to do with "almost incalculable"? Useless.

And there is no audited support for the £4 billion figure. Elsewhere, we read "in many ways GDS has been a success story ... with a claimed £1.7 billion cost savings" (Helen Margetts). After reading Government unveils £14.3 billion of savings for 2013 to 2014, turn to p.4 of End of year savings 2013 to 2014: technical note and you'll find claimed savings of £91 million + £119 million = £210 million or, to put it another way, £0.21 billion. Not £4 billion. Not even £1.7 billion. Which figure, if any, is correct? More research required, Mr Rooney. And Ms Margetts.

GDS have a poor record with figures. They're not good at them. Not comfortable. It's not their thing. 4%. 0.6%. What's the difference?

The National Audit Office (NAO), whose job it is to audit government accounts, noted back in March 2013 that "the GDS has estimated total potential annual savings of £1.7 billion to £1.8 billion ..." (para.1.5) and "we have not audited the estimated savings" (para.1.6).

These estimated savings are supposed to be made by reducing headcount. 1½ million public servants should be made redundant. That's the idea behind GDS's Government as a Platform strategy (GaaP).

Two years later, June 2015, the NAO published Central government staff costs (para.2.15): "Most departments have made limited progress in using digital services more in their strategic workforce planning, to achieve significant staff reductions. The government expects digital services to reduce staff costs by processing transactions efficiently and introducing more customer self-service. To help kick start digital services, departments have been developing and implementing digital exemplars. However, we have seen little evidence that departments are making the expected savings".

"We have seen little evidence that departments are making the expected savings"? Scepticism is the order of the day ...

... even when it comes to Stephen Foreshew-Cain's October 2015 blog post, How digital and technology transformation saved £1.7bn last year. Her Majesty's Treasury warns readers that: "These savings figures are not national or official statistics: they are based on management information evidence in department reports and other supporting evidence".

Let's leave Mr Rooney and Ms Margetts doing their further research for a moment and look at Mr Foreshew-Cain's claim that "85% of self assessment filing is done through online channels". He's talking about self-assessment for UK income tax.

Like the car tax example, it should be noted that this is little or nothing to do with GDS. Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) got on-line self-assessment up and running years before GDS existed, please see the January 2008 Government Gateway/self-assessment letter alongside.

The Government Gateway has been operating in the UK since 2001. HMRC collect all Value Added Tax (VAT/sales tax) returns on-line using the Gateway. Ditto company returns for Pay As You Earn (PAYE/income tax) and National Insurance (social security). Ditto all Corporation Tax returns. They have done for years. It's nothing to do with GDS.

By the same token, when Mr Foreshew-Cain says that "over 98% of driving tests are now booked online" he may well be right but it's got little or nothing to do with GDS. It's DVLA again, the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency, the same people who've been collecting car tax on-line for 10 years.

"When we, the citizens, have to deal with the government we neither know, nor care, what department we have to deal with. It is a huge arrogance to assume that we should know ...", says Mr Rooney. No. The huge arrogance is to assume that all government digital success is thanks to GDS. There are other departments.

À-propos, Mr Rooney believes that "... thanks to the GDS, the UN ranked the UK best in the world in the 2016 E-Government rankings". Nowhere in their 242-page report do the United Nations say that.

On p.110 they do refer to HMRC's success with self-assessment and to DVLA's success with driving tests. They do not ascribe those successes to GDS.

Talking of GDS, Mr Rooney suddenly remembers "heck, it even won a design award – and when did any government IT project anywhere in the world ever win a design award?". Charmingly folksy, it obviously doesn't hurt to win an award but it doesn't help either. How does winning an award help the Exchequer or the British people? How does it help to prove that GDS shouldn't have its terms of reference changed three years later? Or that it shouldn't be terminated for having achieved little or nothing since then?

"So successful has the GDS been that the Obama administration shamelessly copied its playbook for its own US Digital Service, as did the Australians". It is only sensible to copy GDS's "playbook" if GDS has been "so successful". And so far, Mr Rooney has failed to demonstrate that it has been.

Anyway, who's copying whom? GDS's identity assurance scheme is a copy of the US's NSTIC, the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace. And GaaP was dreamed up by the US's Tim O'Reilly (banshee).

Kevin Cunnington worked previously at the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). "This is the same DWP ... whose own IT projects are a text-book example of everything that is wrong with government IT", says Mr Rooney. Maybe, but that doesn't prove that GDS is a textbook example of everything that is right with government IT.

Mr Rooney sagely reminds us that "bad IT ... erodes trust and harms democracy". What about GDS's agile failure with the Rural Payments Agency? That was bad IT. What about the failings of its application to register to vote system? Or the student loans system?

Above all, what about GOV.UK Verify (RIP), GDS's failed identity assurance system? Years late, privacy-destroying, insecure and still not working, what is there to choose between GDS and any other systems integrator with guaranteed government work?

We have concentrated on Mr Rooney's keening because it is the most complete set of whinges but the same criticism applies to all the banshees – they can't make the reader understand what's so heroic about GDS. Or why they're moaning so much about changes at GDS. Hyperbole, Mr du Preez? Yes.

GDS & the banshees 2


The system is not set up to do stuff.
It’s set up, frankly,
to have an intellectual pissing match
around how its things should be.


On 1 August 2016 one man replaced another man as head of the Government Digital Service (GDS). Kevin Cunnington came. Stephen Foreshew-Cain left. People come and people go. It's not unusual but on this occasion there was an exorbitant keening and wailing and moaning from an international class of banshees.

Friday 19 August 2016

GDS & the banshees 1


The system is not set up to do stuff.
It’s set up, frankly,
to have an intellectual pissing match
around how its things should be.


Proper journalists have sources and on Sunday 31 August July 2016 Bryan Glick, editor of Computer Weekly magazine, published DWP director Kevin Cunnington set to take over as new head of Government Digital Service. Next day he turned out to be right, John Manzoni: Changes at the Government Digital Service.

The Government Digital Service (GDS) has a budget – £450 million to tide them over to 31 March 2020 – but no published strategy. Mr Glick's sources seem to have been able to give him the date of the overdue announcement of GDS's strategy – 15 September 2016 – and some insight into official thinking: "Our sources say the Cabinet Office hopes to use the launch of the new strategy to 'nullify any coverage around GDS being in confusion or disarray' ...".

These matters are of little popular interest. They will not detain historians. But anthropologists studying the GDS tribe will note that the Cabinet Office were destined to be disappointed. The appointment of Kevin Cunnington was announced and, instantly, full-throated keening broke out among the GDS banshees.

J’accuse John Manzoni Part 2 – A Digital Purge, wailed Derek du Preez on diginomica.com: "make no mistake about what is happening. The long-standing power base across some of the most influential departments in Whitehall are using the post-Brexit chaos as an opportunity to make a land grab for the power (and money) they so enjoy" and "Let me make this clear – in my opinion, senior civil servants in the Department for Work and Pensions, the Home Office and HMRC have thrown the interests of citizens out of the window, in an attempt to maintain the status quo. Heels are digging in and the political daggers are out" and "this could well be the beginning of the end for GDS progress".

Mr du Preez quotes another banshee, Andrew Greenway, a classical scholar who once was something to do with GDS and who wrote in Losing one is a misfortune. Two?: "Meanwhile, GDS is following the course charted by other successful centralised reformers in government. Icarus-like soaring for a few years. The occasional flutter of feathers. Then a headlong dive into the timeless, inky depths of the bureaucratic abyss. The sun always rises, Whitehall always wins".

Tim O'Reilly weighed in, with Alan Turing rather than Icarus, and told us in What's Up With the British? that: "The UK Government Digital Service, hailed and emulated around the world as among the most innovative and successful approaches to bringing government into the 21st century, is the target of senior civil servants who seek to break it up and reduce its ability to transform business as usual".

"Helen Margetts ... sits on the Advisory Board of the Government Digital Service", it says (falsely?) in Back to the bad old days, as civil service infighting threatens UK’s only hope for digital government and, just to keep the voltage up, she contributed "GDS isn’t perfect, but to erase the progress it has put in place would be a terrible loss".

What progress? How terrible? She didn't say, but someone called Jimmy Leach gnashed his teeth and wanted his question answered Whitehall's revenge: Will the Government Digital Service be broken up? while garment-renderer Ben Rooney chipped in with Heroes behind government's digital revolution face extinction from Whitehall's arcane ways.

It's all too late according to "negotiation expert" David Eaves. Everyone is going to die: The Empire Strikes Back: How the death of GDS puts all government innovators at risk.

It's a banshee's job to keen and the banshees have duly keened. Even Tony Collins, with Is Sir Humphrey trying to kill off GDS and the innovations it stands for?.

What's all the fuss about? That's a question to which we may return.

Until then, note that it's not all breast-beating. Others have been more circumspect. Ignore the doom-mongers. The Government Digital Service is evolving, not retreating, according to Civil Service World magazine. And Kevin Cunnington has rather sensibly contented himself so far with saying nothing more than "hello".

GDS & the banshees 1


The system is not set up to do stuff.
It’s set up, frankly,
to have an intellectual pissing match
around how its things should be.


Proper journalists have sources and on Sunday 31 August July 2016 Bryan Glick, editor of Computer Weekly magazine, published DWP director Kevin Cunnington set to take over as new head of Government Digital Service. Next day he turned out to be right, John Manzoni: Changes at the Government Digital Service.

The Government Digital Service (GDS) has a budget – £450 million to tide them over to 31 March 2020 – but no published strategy. Mr Glick's sources seem to have been able to give him the date of the overdue announcement of GDS's strategy – 15 September 2016 – and some insight into official thinking: "Our sources say the Cabinet Office hopes to use the launch of the new strategy to 'nullify any coverage around GDS being in confusion or disarray' ...".

Sunday 7 August 2016

What else don't they know?

Government as a Platform (GaaP) is rumoured to be at the heart of the Government Digital Service's strategy.

GaaP has its own blog ...

... and the other day Graham Bleach published Incident Report: Platform as a Service for government:
This post is about an incident in the 'Platform as a Service for government' production environment for hosting applications.

What happened

At 1.30pm UTC on Friday 3 June 2016, a program to delete Cloud Foundry (CF) development environments was accidentally run in the production environment. As a result, there was a complete outage to the platform.
Take another look. Just to check: "a program to delete ... development environments was accidentally run in the production environment. As a result, there was a complete outage to the platform".

Accidentally?

This accident should be almost impossible.

Cast your mind back 37 years to 1979, when DMossEsq had to make an amendment to some data on the Lloyds Bank International (LBI) live production database. Programs acting on the production system all had the prefix X. Y was used for test development systems only. So he couldn't use YDBAXS, it had to be XDBAXS. The operators wouldn't run an XDBAXS job without the signed authorisation of the deputy head of the computer department. And he wouldn't sign without a convincing explanation.

No-one questioned this procedure. It was just obviously prudent.

It still is. But it appears nevertheless to have eluded GDS. They have only just learned this basic element of prudence. A test data job was allowed to delete the production environment. "... there was a complete outage to the platform". On their core system. GaaP. The one that Whitehall and everyone else is supposed to feel total confidence in. And invest in.

If GDS are still learning that lesson, what else don't they know yet? That we at LBI and everyone else already knew 37 years ago and more.

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Updated 10.8.16

Helen Margetts is the "Professor of Society and the Internet and Director, Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford" and she "sits on the Advisory Board of the Government Digital Service [GDS]".

"The largest government departments have begun to reassert their authority over GDS expert advice", she tells us, without telling us what GDS's expertise is, "and digital government looks likely to be dragged back towards the deeply dysfunctional old ways of doing things", like keeping your production environment safely separated from the development environment, please see above.

"GDS isn’t perfect, but to erase the progress it has put in place would be a terrible loss". What is this logic? GDS has failed to see off the deeply dysfunctional old ways of doing things and that is progress, the loss of which would be terrible?

GDS has 700 staff according to Professor Margetts and a budget of £450 million to spend on unspecified UK government contracts by March 2020. Just like half a dozen other systems integrators (SIs), the villains of the deeply dysfunctional old ways of doing things.

They have performed just as badly as the other SIs. See for example Government Digital Service “hindered delivery” of rural payments programme, Public Accounts Committee says and Student Loans Company burns £50 million in IT project superfail and Electoral Commission warns of ‘lost’ voters and ...

What went wrong? Was it a deeply dysfunctional leadership? Or a deeply dysfunctional Advisory Board?

What else don't they know?

Government as a Platform (GaaP) is rumoured to be at the heart of the Government Digital Service's strategy.