Thursday, October 10, 2013

Obamacare Website Costly And Poorly Designed

See The $634 MILLION dollar Obamacare website “needs a COMPLETE overhaul” from the Right Scoop which links to a CBS News report.
"This is a pretty blistering report by CBS News on the rollout of Obamacare via the HHS website that cost $634 million to build. CBS News not only says it was ‘nothing short of disastrous’, but interviewed a computer database software expert who said he would be embarrassed had his company rolled out something like this. He said it’s not demand that’s killing the website, but rather it wasn’t designed well and looks like it wasn’t even beta tested. He said the website needs a complete overhaul. Great, how much more will that cost us?"
See also Glitchy Healthcare.gov cost taxpayers more than $634 million to buildfrom the Daily Caller. Excerpts:
"With critics panning the Obamacare exchange website Healthcare.gov for its myriad technological problems, a tech news site has surfaced with a dollar estimate for what the glitchy website actually cost taxpayers.

According to Digital Trends, CGI Federal received $634,320,919 to construct Healthcare.gov — or more than the amount spent building Linkedin ($200 million) and Spotify ($288 million) combined.

The site also cost more than it took to initially create Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, according to the report."

"The expense appears even larger when compared with the amount the company was originally slated to receive, as in 2011 CGI Federal was contracted to build the site for about $93 million.

This news comes as Fox News reports that officials in the White House might have known prior to the launch that the site was not ready and the government still has not released information on how many people have successfully enrolled in the federal exchanges.

Thursday, an Associated Press-GFK poll revealed that seven percent of Americans reported that somebody in their household has tried to sign up for the exchange, however among those who experimented with the exchanges, just 10 percent of those who attempted to sign up were able to buy health insurance.

According to the AP, about 75 percent of Americans polled said they experienced problems trying to sign up."


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