Australia is moving top secret intelligence data to the cloud with a new billion-dollar AWS deal

A cloud storage vector illustration featuring an image of a cloud with connecting server links
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Australia’s government wants help from Amazon Web Services (AWS) to build a super top-secret cloud for its law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

The country's leaders say the new AWS platform will be “purpose-built for Australia's Defence and National Intelligence Community agencies to securely host our country's most sensitive information.”

Super secret cloud announcement

The Australian government says the project is expected to “improve our ability to securely share and analyze our nation's most classified data at speed and at scale, and provides opportunities to harness leading technologies including artificial intelligence and machine learning.”

Australia has also touted the project will allow intelligence communities down-under to better collaborate with their US counterparts, but will remain fully sovereign according to Australian officials.

The Register points out this presents a tricky situation whereby the cloud will host sensitive data while also interoperating with Five Eyes, so how Australia will navigate the fine line between sovereignty and interoperability is yet to be determined.

No details have been revealed yet on where the cloud will be located, ownership of the infrastructure, or payment arrangements.

Australia’s first announcement of its intention to pursue a top secret cloud was in late 2023, with Andrew Shearer, director-general of national intelligence saying, “What that will do is obviously transform how we do our work as agencies but also it'll open up a shared collaborative space that will really, I think, reinforce this sense of working together as a genuine community and bringing all those different capabilities to bear on problems.”

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Benedict Collins
Senior Writer, Security

Benedict has been with TechRadar Pro for over two years, and has specialized in writing about cybersecurity, threat intelligence, and B2B security solutions. His coverage explores the critical areas of national security, including state-sponsored threat actors, APT groups, critical infrastructure, and social engineering.

Benedict holds an MA (Distinction) in Security, Intelligence, and Diplomacy from the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, providing him with a strong academic foundation for his reporting on geopolitics, threat intelligence, and cyber-warfare.

Prior to his postgraduate studies, Benedict earned a BA in Politics with Journalism, providing him with the skills to translate complex political and security issues into comprehensible copy.