
"If you have all the information you need at hand, it should take you 10 to 15 minutes to complete the survey. This new web-based, self-service survey walks organizations through 21 multiple-choice questions. Areas covered include data residency, encryption key control, disaster recovery planning for geopolitical events, and the ability to prevent sensitive data from crossing borders. The goal is to move digital sovereignty from vague policy talk to a measurable "sovereignty baseline" that IT and business leaders can act on."
"Over the past year, several governments and companies outside the US have decided they can't trust American tech companies. So, digital sovereignty has become an important goal. While American companies, as you can imagine, aren't happy about that, they're now helping European organizations to achieve their digital sovereignty goals. One of the first of these was Linux and cloud-native computing powerhouse Red Hat. Late last year, Red Hat became the first US company to announce its own EU-specific digital sovereignty program, Red Hat Confirmed Sovereign Support (RHCSS)."
Trust in US technology providers has fallen among some governments and companies outside the US, increasing demand for digital sovereignty. Red Hat launched an EU-specific program, Red Hat Confirmed Sovereign Support (RHCSS), to keep critical European IT operations under EU control. Red Hat also released an open-source Digital Sovereignty Readiness Assessment toolkit to provide a concrete, measurable sovereignty baseline. The web-based, self-service survey contains 21 multiple-choice questions covering data residency, encryption key control, disaster recovery for geopolitical events, and preventing sensitive data crossing borders. The assessment takes about 10–15 minutes and leaves users in control of their data and use of the evaluation.
Read at ZDNET
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