Why Data Embassies Matter

Two key use cases illustrate their value:

  • Resilient national backups Countries can store sensitive data offshore while still keeping it under their own national laws. This is especially useful for smaller nations vulnerable to major internet outages, such as the loss of undersea cables.
  • Hosting services for nations with weaker infrastructure Services like visa applications can run in Luxembourg’s advanced data embassy while remaining subject to the originating nation’s laws. This allows countries to benefit from high‑quality infrastructure without triggering GDPR or other foreign regulations.

Estonia and Monaco have already signed data‑embassy agreements with Luxembourg.

See E-embassies in Luxembourg – Luxembourg for more information.

The Geneva Convention’s protective emblems date back to 1864, when the Red Cross was adopted to mark medical facilities. As the time passed, the red crescent and red diamond was adopted later and have the same meaning.

In the 21st century, medical systems have become deeply digitised. Hospitals and clinics rely heavily on digital infrastructure and cyberattacks can severely disrupt or halt critical services.

Modern warfare now includes a parallel cyberwar, conducted by both state and non‑state actors. Just as physical medical sites should not be targeted, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is developing digital emblems to mark protected medical infrastructure in cyberspace.

What a Digital Emblem Does

The concept is simple:

  • Hospitals and medical services tag their digital assets with an internationally recognised emblem.
  • State actors should avoid cyberattacks on systems marked with this emblem.

This will not eliminate attacks entirely — just as physical emblems do not always prevent bombings — but it establishes a clear humanitarian norm. As the document notes, “doing something like this is much better than doing nothing at all.

Picture credit ICRC

Importantly, digital emblems do not replace robust cybersecurity practices. They complement them.

SeeModern Warfare; Timeless Emblems: The Digital Emblem Project | ICRCfor more information.

Final Thoughts

Both conventions — originally designed for physical spaces — are being reimagined for a world where critical national functions live in the cloud and warfare includes digital fronts. Data embassies extend diplomatic protection to information, while digital emblems extend humanitarian protection to medical systems