Kshemendra Paul: That’s correct. We work extensively with our state and local partners, and I’ve talked about that in the earlier segments.
JIm Flyzik: Mm hmm.
Kshemendra Paul: I’d really like to highlight and go back to something I talked about earlier – project interoperability.
JIm Flyzik: Okay.
Kshemendra Paul: We’re committed to working with our private sector partners, in particular working with international volunteer consensus standard organizations, IT industry through industry associations.
JIm Flyzik: Mm hmm.
Kshemendra Paul: We’ve taken the greatest hits of the ISC.
JIm Flyzik: Okay.
Kshemendra Paul: Frameworks like the national information exchange model, the way we do identity credential and access management, data attributes, geo-spatial information sharing, and we’re working to package those in the mission diagnostic way and anchor them underneath the standards coordinating council.
JIm Flyzik: Okay.
Participant: 3 international standards organizations, 3 government standards Kshemendra Paul organizations, foreign industry associations, the public-private collaboration. So by anchoring these open government ideas…
JIm Flyzik: Mm hmm.
Kshemendra Paul: And doing the work of developing these frameworks outside the 4 walls of government, but in open settings, we think that it’s going to allow in a mission agnostic way access to these frameworks and tools to drive interoperability and information sharing.
JIm Flyzik: Great, great. So you’re putting in place the, what needs to be in place to make it all happen. Kind of like a, kind of like a steer not row
Kshemendra Paul: Exactly, exactly. These are the enabling frameworks.
JIm Flyzik: Right.
Kshemendra Paul: It doesn’t take the place of communities of interest – private sector players, public sector players coming together.
JIm Flyzik: Right.
Kshemendra Paul: But then this gives them that road map once they come together about how to do it.
JIm Flyzik: Yeah.
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