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posted by n1 on Wednesday August 10 2016, @05:32PM   Printer-friendly
from the outsourcing-the-dragnet dept.

The government of Estonia is one of the most cyber-aware governments in the world. Recent reports have suggested that the country has been in discussion with the UK for the establishment of an overseas data embassy. Those same reports suggest that Britain's decision to leave the European Union is making Estonia reconsider the UK, and perhaps favor Luxembourg. If this is true, it could make the loss of business with Estonia the first major cyber casualty of the Brexit.

[...] Although the Ministry here describes the project as simply a data center, it has elsewhere used the term 'virtual data embassy'. This is to differentiate the concept from simple backups that have been stored in overseas embassies for the last ten years. Estonia is facing an issue now that will be faced by more and more nations as electronic government increases: secure mirrors will be required to ensure that the country itself doesn't face downtime in a catastrophe. Estonia, of course faces the additional concern of physical incursion from its neighbor and one-time overlord, Russia.

Taavi Kotka, the Government CIO, wrote, "As part of this research project, we have evaluated methods to ensure that the data and services of and for our citizens, e-residents, and institutions are kept safe, secure, and continuously available. Privacy, security, data protection, and data integrity are central to our government services." He added that after the Snowden revelations, both governments and large corporations are facing a trust-deficit. It is the combination of Snowden's GCHQ revelations combined with the potential effect of Brexit that makes the UK seem a less privacy-centric destination for Estonian government data.


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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by DeathMonkey on Wednesday August 10 2016, @06:41PM

    by DeathMonkey (1380) on Wednesday August 10 2016, @06:41PM (#386348) Journal

    so the free market might be allowed to work to correct the overreach of the uk gov.
     
    How is leaving a voluntary organization at the behest of the people an "overreach," exactly?
     
    It may be a stupid decision and/or an example of why direct-democracy is a bad idea, but overreach it is not.

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