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Data Sovereignty: A New 2030 Agenda

We live in an era where terms like “sustainability,” “inclusion,” and “digital transition” are everywhere. But one topic is often overlooked — or worse, left entirely in the hands of a few global giants: digital sovereignty.

In a world where data is more valuable than gold, blindly entrusting it to those who follow rules and interests that don’t reflect our own is a risk — not just a technical one, but a cultural, social, and geopolitical one.

It’s time to imagine a new 2030 agenda: not based on centralization and dependency, but on freedom, transparency, and control over our own data.

Good habits are no longer enough

Strong passwords, two-factor authentication, regular backups: all useful, all essential. But these are only part of the picture. They mean little if, at the core, we continue to rely on infrastructures that are increasingly targeted by attacks and shaken by global tensions.

It’s no longer just about protecting access to your account — it’s about choosing where and to whomyou entrust your digital identity.

U.S. cybersecurity budget cuts: cracks in the foundation

The recent policy shift in the United States — cutting cybersecurity funding — sends a clear message: even global powers are no longer a guarantee of protection.

With weakened federal agencies, even major U.S. cloud providers — Google, Microsoft, Amazon—are becoming more exposed, less monitored, and less resilient.

And us, in Europe? We still host our data on servers outside our jurisdiction, subject to foreign laws that rarely align with our privacy standards.

Europe changes course: digital sovereignty by 2030

The European Union has made a bold move: no more digital dependency.

The goal is to build sovereign, interoperable, and independent infrastructures that comply with European principles of privacy, transparency, and taxation.

A digital Europe that doesn’t need permission from overseas to guarantee security and continuity for its people.

But we can’t wait until 2030 to act. The alternatives already exist — and they’re ready.

AnoniCloud: Swiss Sovereignty, Total Security

AnoniCloud was built with a clear purpose: to give people back control over their data.

We’re not just a “storage provider.” We are a fully independent system, built and hosted in Switzerland, beyond the reach of intrusive legislation, surveillance, or foreign interference.

End-to-end encryption, real anonymity, no profiling, no tracking.

AnoniCloud is for those who won’t settle for hoping their data is safe — they want to know itverify it, and demand it.

Choosing AnoniCloud isn’t just a technical choice — it’s a personal and collective act of sovereignty. It’s a concrete answer, available today, to the new 2030 agenda we truly need.

In 1982, when I was 11, for the first time I’ve seen live a computer. It was an IBM/360; in 1983, for the first time in my life, I’ve turned on my own computer. In 1985 on my desk appeared a mouse and a box with some 5” 1/4 floppy disk. Now I’m about 50; every morning I open the lid of my MacBook Pro, that is n times powerful, faster and smaller than the IBM/360, the VIC-20 and the Apple //c together. But nothing can overcome the emotion I felt entering that noisy machine room, of writing on such ridicolous, small screen and of smelling the plastic of my earlier, outdated, mass memory supports.