Hey hey, ho ho, where's Obama's CTO?

By Angela Gunn | Published January 26, 2009, 9:11 PM

As Senate hearings for the new Administration's cabinet members continue, tech folk are eagerly awaiting word on the status of the brand-new CTO position. So who's it going to be?

Speculation at this point seems to alight on candidates who already hold the job in other organizations. In the public service sector, the name that seems to come up most frequently is that of Vivek Kundra, currently serving as CTO of Washington, DC and a recent veteran of Obama's transition team.

Before taking those jobs, Kundra was Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Technology for the Commonwealth of Virginia; before that, he was VP of marketing at Evincible Software and CEO of Creostar. Comfortable discussing and deploying new technologies (he's taught courses on doing so at U-MD), Kundra blogs and has used crowdsourcing techniques for picking and developing apps for citizens.

A number of candidates from the high-tech industry have also been suggested, from the improbable to the intriguing. In the former category, most of us would put Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer, and even Steve Jobs (whom one online commenter insisted has withdrawn from leading Apple not because he's sick but because he's Getting Ready; this may have been the most hopeful thing yet said about Mr. Jobs' current situation).

Two of the most prominent private-sector suggestions at this point are Padmasree Warrior, CTO of Cisco, and Charles Phillips, president of Oracle. Warrior has previously served on FCC and NSF panels, and she previously held the CTO spot at Motorola. Phillips also has experience in both the public and private sectors, the former as a commissioned Air Force officer and the latter as a managing director at Morgan Stanley. (He also holds both an MBA and a law degree.)

President Obama's pick could come down to what sort of job the federal CTO is destined to be -- the biggest unknown of all. It's not a position buried 'ssomewhere in GAO, or in the Department of Homeland Security, or squirreled away in any of the many government agencies that have or claim to have a toehold on federal tech. With so many constituencies both in need of guidance (not to mention, based on what we're all hearing about the ancient technology deployed around the federal government, in need of an passport to the 21st century) and edgy about losing political capital in the new administration, it's about not only technology acumen but politics.

But what if, just for fun, we cast the net a bit wider? Few would argue that security is, or should be, a major issue for our new CTO. Additionally, many tech folk would like to see an open-source maven at the helm -- and heaven knows that the art of managing big open-source projects is in large part about juggling the worries and demands of far-flung and vocal constituencies. So how about Window Snyder, the just-departed Mozilla CSO?

She's done her time at a big company (at Microsoft, she was security lead on XP SP2 and Server 2003), she's got the entrepreneurial experience (co-founded Matasano), and as of about a month ago she left Mozilla to "go work on something I have always been passionate about. I wish I could tell you about it now, but that will have to wait for a while." Most importantly, she has a known fondness for cephalopods -- and anyone taking on technology for the federal government could probably use a good understanding of things that are octopus-like.

Ms. Snyder was, sensibly enough, not available for comment by our deadline.

Comments

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Someone i wiuld love to see in the CTO position: Bruce Schneier. Especially if the CTO is also working security.

And DatabaseBen, ghetto speak? I generally have heard the line referenced from clueless white pseudo-radicals at anti WTO protests, though i'll buy the cheerleading roots of it AG mentions.

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We had some rather peculiar cheerleaders at my school, MFHeadcase. I always suspected one of them heard it on the news or something (at, exactly as you said, some protest or other) and thought "gee, that's catchy! you could make that into a cheer!" But we're all better off if I just pass on trying to understand the cheerleading mindset. Even my mom gave up hope on that front at some point.

Schneier would be an amazing choice, and I'd love to send him off to DC to p*** cryptographic excellence in the White House. (The greatest security-related quote of all time? I challenge you to name a better.) He's served in advisory roles in the past, though, and considering all his other commitments I'd be surprised if he wasn't asked to do the same in this administration at some point -- without committing him to full-time work and endless rounds of meetings. (I didn't say CTO would be a FUN job, did I?)

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Heh, beyond Schneier's cryptographic excellence, he is someone who looks at security rationally. Including the economic reasons that it so often sucks.

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i don't know if i can appreciate the title of the article. is this ghetto speak?

why is there a pic of our president on the article on the front page and not the author of the article instead, like professional standards would have?

i don't recall seeing similar face shots for bill gates on articles pertaining to microsoft or jobs on articles for apple.

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Y'know, I'm far from being the 'politically correct' type, but I was thinking the same thing. The heading seems rather tacky, if not a bit racist.

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yes, i agree.

the old cliché, "don't judge a book by its cover" certainly can't apply articles.

i'm sure every one judges the content of the article and its author by its title.

perhaps, such language is used to attract the attention of certain readers, like those with a limited vocabulary or perhaps disgruntle or bigoted repulsive-cans.

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Interesting, um, confusion. It's a rather well-known chant -- I know it from both protest marches and cheerleading (no, not me, sheesh; one does hear cheerleaders sometimes at football games, no matter *how* one tries to tune them out). Definitely predates my time -- it originated in the 60s, I think -- but it's known to most people who've ever attended a political event. Recommend a Googling of "hey hey ho ho" for further elucidation. And, honestly, you may need to get outside more.

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Um what?
what the hell does "UM" mean?
such vocabulary is simply garbage speak.

perhaps you are correct that cheerleaders know what hey hey implies.

perhaps this article is intended for cheerleaders.

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Ahhh! I see, DatabaseBen is just a troll, Sorry for having pushed a response in your general direction before, i am now seeking an "ignore" feature on this site.

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troll? is that what you call your college professors?

if you can't refrain from posting then it is not because there is a lack of a ignore feature.

instead what is being featured here is that you don't lack ignorance.

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