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by vimda 1666 days ago
Gotta be Fedramp compliant to do business with the US government. Even worse, you have to be Fedramp compliant to work with anyone who works with the US government. From a business (if not an engineering) standpoint, there's plenty to gain in going through the motions
1 comments

As was pointed out downthread, there are tech companies that are "more" FedRAMP compliant (FedRAMP "High") without DNSSEC support.

(Kenn White points out on Twitter that some of this may be due to grandfathering --- though, the FedRAMP DNSSEC requirement is pretty old.)

I don't know about FedRAMP, but with other government requirements, the easiest way to get an exception was to fail badly at implementing the retirement.

When the DOD tried to mandate Ada, lots of projects were bid as Ada, then switched to C++ at the very first sign of any trouble whatsoever. I would 100% believe it if someone told me that this horrible rollout could be leveraged into an exemption from needing DNSSEC

We had to do DNSSEC (for a couple of "system relevant" services) too.

Was it a hard requirement? No, but the fat fingered audit companies really like to tick that "should" box green and would be more lenient with other debatable findings, so it was suddenly "in our best interests" to comply.