Iceland Wants to Help Keep Your Digital Secrets

Of course, “gray-market” secure and anonymous hosting has existed for nearly as long as the Web, but for potential whistle-blowers and established organizations like Wikileaks, Iceland’s announcement is sure to be welcome news.
Unlike gray-market hosting, Iceland’s attempt at establishing a datahaven will be completely legal. Backed up by legislation created to ensure total privacy and freedom of speech, Iceland intends to defend data privacy even in the face of potential lawsuits from foreign governments and multi-national corporations.
You may recognize the parallels between Iceland’s announcement regarding data security and the plot of the 1999 Neal Stephenson novel “Cryptonomicon”, which chronicles a fictional attempt to create a datahaven in the Philippines to subvert fascist regimes. Iceland’s intent may not be as high-minded--since it’s intended mostly as an economic incentive for a nation hard-hit by the global banking crisis--but it will surely be embraced by geeks and privacy advocates the world over.
[via Marketplace]
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