Public Services Network
Public Services Network (PSN) | |
---|---|
Type | data and voice |
Location | United Kingdom |
Protocols | IP |
Operator | Government Digital Service (part of UK government Cabinet Office) |
Established | 2008 |
Current status | operational |
Commercial? | No |
Website |
www |
The Public Services Network (PSN) is the UK government’s high-performance network, which helps public sector organisations work together, reduce duplication and share resources. It unified the provision of network infrastructure across the United Kingdom public sector into an interconnected "network of networks" to increase efficiency and reduce overall public expenditure.
Origins
The PSN was conceived as part of the Transformational Government initiatives commencing in 2005,[1] under the original name of the Public Sector Network.
The original concept of a network of networks strategy was based upon the recognition of Communities of Interest (COI) within the Criminal Justice Sector during work by the Office for Criminal Justice Reform (OCJR) between 2005 and 2007 to enable data sharing across business units.[2]
In this context a COI was defined as groups of Government departments and external partners who in combination provided services within a specific area of operation and used the same data, with a similar risk profile, shared risk appetite and common governance framework. Historically each group member had implemented their own networks and standards of operation in isolation with little or no consideration as to how services and data may be shared and resulting in increased costs of operation.
The Network of Networks strategy proposed within OCJR recommended the creation of specific networks based upon these Communities of Interest which were joined together through data interchange gateways supporting common standards. Under this approach networks would be arranged by data type and business functions such as Criminal Justice, Health and Social Care, Defence and Intelligence or Public Finance rather than solely on established departmental boundaries. Within a COI, trust relationships and data interchange are readily supported, enabling data sharing without a need to cross network boundaries and providing benefits of scale without the challenges and compromises intrinsic to homogeneous cross sector networks. Data is made available without a need to transport it between organisations and control is retained by the data originator.
In early 2007 a group of UK Government department CTOs in conjunction with the Office for Government Commerce Buying Solutions (OGC BS) established the vision for a single commonly provided, procured and managed public sector voice and data network infrastructure to replace the multitude of separately procured and managed networks serving various segments of the UK public sector; Education, Health, Central Government, Local Government etc.[1]
In 2008 an Industry Working Group was established to document the objectives and requirements more clearly.[3] Their report set out the architectural and commercial principles as well as anticipated security, service management, governance and transition arrangements.[1]
Architecture
The PSN comprises a core network, the Government Conveyancing Network or GCN provided by GCN Service Providers or GCNSPs. The GCN interconnects multiple operator networks, termed Direct Network Service Providers or DNSPs. Subscriber organisations contract to a connection from a local participating DNSP, connect via that to GCN and hence onwards to other interconnected networks and services. The GCN network is entirely based on IPv4 and MPLS[4] and the GCNSPs are not currently mandated to provide IPv6, though they should have a roadmap to implementing it if and when required.[5]
Commercial framework
In 2010 Virgin Media Business,[6] BT,[7] Cable & Wireless and Global Crossing signed Deeds of Undertaking (DoU)[8] and subsequently achieved accreditation for providing GCN and IP VPN services.[9]
In March 2012, BT, Cable & Wireless, Capita Business Services, Eircom, Fujitsu, Kcom, Level 3, Logicalis, MDNX, Thales, Updata and Virgin Media Business were successful bidders for the initial two year PSN Connectivity framework.[10]
In June 2012, 29 companies were confirmed as suppliers of ICT services to the UK public sector under the Government’s PSN Services framework contract. Apart from most of the previous suppliers, additional companies also included 2e2, Airwave Solutions, Azzurri Communications, Cassidian, CSC Computer Sciences, Computacenter, Daisy Communications, Easynet Global Services, Everything Everywhere, Freedom Communications, Icom Holdings, NextiraOne, PageOne Communications, Phoenix IT Group, Siemens Communications, Specialist Computer Centres, Telefónica, telent Technology Services, Uniworld Communications and Vodafone.[11]
Governance
The PSN is managed within the Cabinet Office where it is part of the Government Digital Service.
Early implementations
There were already notable initiatives in progress in county council areas, demonstrating public sector network integration in both the Hampshire HPSN2 network and in Kent's community network. Project Pathway was established as a pilot linking these two county-wide networks, with Virgin Media Business and Global Crossing the subscriber and GCN network elements.[12] [13] Staffordshire County Council was the first council in England to establish a PSN that included the county's NHS Health partners. Other county councils have since followed the leads of these councils.
Transition
Centrally procured public sector networks are expected to migrate across to the PSN framework as they reach the end of their contract terms, either through an interim framework or directly. The Government Secure Intranet (GSi) contracts expired in September 2011, running on to 12 February 2012 and were replaced by the transitional Government Secure Intranet Convergence Framework (GCF). The Managed Telephony Service (MTS) contract expired on 31 December 2011 and was replaced by the Managed Telephony Convergence Framework (MTCF).[14]
Challenge
Some have challenged the relevance of the PSN to the UK Government's digital and technology strategies. Those strategies emphasise the ongoing competition and diversity of suppliers in public sector markets,[15] and using the public global internet as the primary infrastructure platform.[16] The PSN effectively limits competition and constrains supplier choice through means of a commercial framework which is not as dynamic as the fiercely competitive commodity connectivity market. Furthermore, critics have raised the following challenges:
- The PSN will always be more expensive than open market prices for the equivalent service. This was publicly acknowledged by a previous Head of the PSN [citation needed].
- The PSN creates a non-scalable bureaucracy, and a bottleneck for the entire PSN. It's governance and service management is not distributed, not decentralised, in the manner much of the internet is.[17]
- The PSN core infrastructure is based on the same networks available to the commercial market, and therefore offers the same levels of technical risk, security and availability.
- The compliance regime is inflexible, often an overhead and contradicts the user-needs driven security design required by the Digital Service Standards.[18] An increasing number of UK government and wider public sector digital services are provided and hosted entirely on the public internet, suitably secured.
- The PSN directly contradicts the UK Government's own network design principles,[19] which encourage use of the public internet and self-securing services.
Situational awareness is often cited as a reason to maintain the PSN, but this is also challenged as the current methods for situational awareness of cybersecurity threats and events do not rely on all monitored services being on a single government managed network.
References
- 1 2 3 "Public Sector Network
Report of Industry Working Group" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 Mar 2010. Retrieved 10 May 2012. - ↑ "Information Sharing Approach for CJS -Executive Summary.pdf" (PDF). 14 June 2006.
- ↑ "CTO COUNCIL MEETING - NOTES Sunningdale Park 19/20 June 2008" (PDF). 19 June 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2010.
- ↑ Higgins, Nick (15 March 2010). "PSN - Technical Domain Description" (PDF). 1.0. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ Hall, Geoff (19 May 2011). "Operating Model GCN Service Description" (PDF). 2.4. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ du Preez, Derek (25 November 2010). "Virgin Media Business signs up to the Public Sector Network". Computing. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ Savvas, Antony (15 May 2011). "Government hires BT to support Public Sector Network". Computerworld UK. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ "Government signs new Public Sector Network undertaking". The Guardian. 7 April 2011. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ Nguyen, Anh (15 August 2011). "Public Services Network (PSN) providers named". Computerworld UK. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ Best, Jo (23 March 2012). "PSN connectivity framework suppliers revealed". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ "Digital public services platform reaches "major milestone"". Cabinet Office. Retrieved 12 February 2013.
- ↑ Nguyen, Anh (11 August 2011). "UK's first government-approved Public Services Network launched". Computerworld UK. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ Say, Mark (22 August 2011). "PSN reaches tipping point". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ↑ "Government Procurement Service - categories - ict - networks - february ezine - mts and gsi services enter their final year". Buying Solutions. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
- ↑ "Technology code of practice — Government Service Design Manual". www.gov.uk. Retrieved 2016-07-24.
- ↑ "Introducing our architecture approach and principles | Government technology". Retrieved 2016-07-24.
- ↑ "Public Sector Network, Report of Industry Working Group [archived PDF]" (PDF).
- ↑ "Digital Service Standard - Digital Service Manual - GOV.UK". www.gov.uk. Retrieved 2016-07-24.
- ↑ "Network principles - GOV.UK". www.gov.uk. Retrieved 2016-07-24.
External links
- Official website
- Hampshire PSN
- Kent PSN
- London PSN
- Scotland PSN
- Staffordshire PSN Case Study
- Yorkshire and Humber PSN
- Guardian PSN Partner Zone Case studies