Brutkey

Giacomo Tesio
@giacomo@snac.tesio.it

no nation can claim digital sovereignty if any person or corporation that responds to external laws can access (directly or indarectly) or prevent access to data about their citizens, companies or organization.
Obviously, except data that people, companies and organizations intentionally make
public for anyone.
This doesn't make such data "unprotected", obviously. But the protection applied to such publicly available data (be them contents created by citizens or their personal data) is unrelated to a Nation's sovereignty.

/cc
@jwildeboer@social.wildeboer.net

Jan Wildeboer 😷😷:krulorange:
@jwildeboer@social.wildeboer.net

@giacomo@snac.tesio.it You reduce the focus to digital sovereignty for nation states, as far as I can see, while I talk about the term in a more extended way. DigSov also for individuals, companies and other kind of non-state constructs.


Giacomo Tesio
@giacomo@snac.tesio.it

@jwildeboer@social.wildeboer.net

That's the
#sovereignty part of #DigitalSovereignty.

Sovereignty is a national concept.

Individuals do not need "sovereignty" but
#autonomy, #dataprotection and #freedom.

Any abstraction that put on the same level individual persons and entire nations is broken and misleading.