Doge Software Licenses Audit HUD: Exposing Unused Federal SoftwareThe doge software licenses audit hud reveals that HUD wasted thousands of unused paid software licenses, including 11,020 Acrobat and 35,855 ServiceNow licenses. Learn how this audit exposed federal waste and the steps being taken to fix it.HUD Software License Audit
Fox News Digital reached out to HUD and the White House on Friday, but did not receive comments by the time of publication โ but HUD provided comment on Saturday.
“The HUD-DOGE taskforce is actively working to remedy this waste of taxpayer dollars,” HUD spokesperson Kasey Lovett said in a statement. “This is a prime example of why HUD is taking inventory of every dollar spent. The Department will continue to execute on the Trump administrationโs goal to restructure and streamline the federal government to best serve the American people.”
Examples of Unused Licenses
For example, there were “11,020 Acrobat licenses with zero users,” DOGE noted in the post on X.
DOGE’s “initial findings on paid software licenses” also included, “35,855 ServiceNow licenses on three products; only using 84,” “1,776 Cognos licenses; only using 325,” “800 WestLaw Classic licenses; only using 216” and “10,000 Java licenses; only using 400.”
The list also included other examples.
“All are being fixed,” the tweet concluded.
DOGEโs Previous Announcements
DOGE has previously made similar announcements regarding the General Services Administration (GSA), Department of Labor, Small Business Administration (SBA) and Social Security Administration (SSA).
“Agencies often have more software licenses than employees, and the licenses are often idle (i.e. paid for, but not installed on any computer),” the DOGE X account noted in a tweet.
“There are vast numbers of unused software licenses in every part of the government. Your tax dollars are being wasted,” Elon Musk wrote when commenting on the DOGE post.
GSA Case Study
“For example, at GSA, with 13,000 employees, there are,” the post listed, “37,000 WinZip licenses,” “19,000 training software subscriptions (and multiple parallel training software platforms),” “7,500 project management software seats for a division with 5,500 employees,” “3 different ticketing systems running in parallel.”
The tweet concluded by noting, “Fixes are actively in work.”
The DOGE GSA X account swiftly replied, indicating that cuts were on the way:
“Not for longโฆ” a tweet read, with a scissor emoji added in an apparent signal that cuts were coming. “We will report back with progress shortly!”
GSA Response and Actions
GSA Acting Administrator and Deputy Administrator Stephen Ehikian replied, “Hope we didn’t make you wait too long… within 3 hours of @DOGE post, @USGSA is taking immediate action to reduce $5.5M of IT spend & working to identify additional reductions across all categoriesโensuring strong stewardship of your tax dollars.”
Several days later, another DOGE post reported that GSA had made significant progress.
“Since this post, @USGSA took immediate action to reduce IT spend by deleting 114,163 unused software licenses & 15 underutilized / redundant software products โ for a total annual savings of $9.6M,” DOGE noted.
A GSA spokesperson said in a statement to Fox News Digital, “In support of the administrationโs priorities, efficiency and good stewardship, GSA is currently undertaking a review of its contracts and resources, including IT resources, to ensure our staff can perform their mission in support of American taxpayers. GSA has taken immediate action to fully implement all current executive orders and is committed to taking swift action to implement any new executive orders.
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