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A contract is a contract is a contract
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But only between Ferengi!

It’s Tuesday! Hopefully the beginning of summer weather is clement wherever you are, and the office AC isn’t cranked up so high that you need a sweater indoors!

In today’s edition:

Vending machine

Gummed-up government

Chat scratch fever

—Eoin Higgins, Caroline Nihill, Billy Hurley, Patrick Lucas Austin

IT OPERATIONS

Close-up of a person signing a form sitting across from another person.

Ljubaphoto/Getty Images

Contracting out work to third-party IT vendors is often challenging.

From licensing issues, regulations forcing companies to submit multiple bids, and the arcane art of negotiation, anything could make or break a deal. And there’s also the possibility of threat-surface expansion. But there are ways to make the process easier.

Vendors are important because there are many things that companies need to do that would be better to have a third party manage. And that doesn’t end with the contract itself; in some cases, negotiation is done by a separate vendor.

Getting help. Oftentimes buyers will turn to third-party negotiators like consulting firm West Monroe. Nate Buniva, a partner at the firm, told IT Brew that clients generally approach the company when they’re already in a bind and need help to get a good price and the most appropriate solution. That goes from the request for proposal, which they structure to be quickly converted to a contract, to working with vendors to answer their questions and shape their proposals for the best fit. Contracting can be a “wild card,” he said, and so the role of a firm like West Monroe is to ensure the proposal delivers on the client’s needs.

Learn all about dealing with vendors.EH

Presented By Rocket Software

CYBERSECURITY

The White House on a map of the US that's stylized like a computer chip.

Burcu Demir/Getty Images

The Biden administration issued two sweeping directives addressing cybersecurity needs for the federal government, including one that materialized just days before President Donald Trump took office. The current president did not rescind the cybersecurity executive orders (EOs) the way he did others.

Now, in the midst of cybersecurity concerns surrounding Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), along with productivity and waste-reducing directives from the Trump administration, it’s unclear whether or not the EOs are still a priority for the federal government.

Well, this is what it looks like. The Trump administration’s new EOs focus heavily on government efficiency and direct agencies to only work on statutorily required activities, which could override tasks from previous directives.

“Until middle of last month, a lot of interagency work was blocked,” one IT professional in the federal government wrote to IT Brew. “This all caused a lot of work stoppage on those EOs, especially anything that required multi-agency collaboration. Folks aren’t really working on the last couple Biden EOs on cyber for example, they just went ‘poof.’”

How DOGE is upending US cybersecurity efforts.CN

SOFTWARE

A hand holding an iPhone using ChatGPT.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Who needs chatbots when you have a panel of IT pros to ask your burning security questions? We asked practitioners: How do you ensure data is secure when everyone is hooked on ChatGPT?

Babson College Chief Information Officer Patty Patria shared how the Massachusetts school enforces restrictions on certain LLMs and trains employees on acceptable use.

“You either need to use what we’re providing to you, or if it’s a student or faculty and they want to use their own proprietary data, use something that we’re paying for that’s closed,” Patria told us in a June 2 story.

Here’s what other industry pros had to say:

Responses have been edited for length and clarity.

Pete Nicoletti, global CISO, Americas, Check Point Software Technologies: ChatGPT has a couple of different levels…The unlicensed [version] goes into a big mosh pit of everybody else’s data. The licensed [version] is going to give you some exclusivity of your data being sequestered.

How to break the fever.BH

Together With Bitwarden

PATCH NOTES

Picture of data with "Clean Me" written on it + bottle of cleaner in front of it, Patch Notes

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top IT reads.

Stat: 41%. That’s the current US business adoption rate of AI products according to fintech company Ramp’s transaction data. (TechCrunch)

Quote: “These bots mislead users into believing that they are licensed mental health therapists.”—US senators on deceptive Meta chatbots (404 Media)

Read: Apple announced that its software and services will have AI features, and said it will open up the underlying tech used for Apple Intelligence. (Reuters)

Do more with data: Rocket Software’s Data Solutions are designed to integrate all your data to help you make better decisions. See how automated workflows can save you time + resources.*

*A message from our sponsor.

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