Swiss lawmakers have taken a significant step in protecting privacy rights while
maintaining security oversight. The parliamentary Transport and
Telecommunications Commission (KVF-S) unanimously supported the Feller Motion,
which emphasizes balancing surveillance with fundamental rights, economic
competitiveness, and job creation.
Following feedback from stakeholders, including ISOC Switzerland Chapter, during
the consultation process, the Federal Council agreed to revise and re-consult on
proposed changes to surveillance ordinances. Importantly, the Federal Council
confirmed that encryption removal obligations do not apply to end-to-end
encryption used by messaging services.
This development supports Switzerland’s position as a leading jurisdiction for
privacy-focused technology companies and reinforces the country’s commitment to
protecting fundamental rights while addressing legitimate security concerns.
The Internet Society (ISOC) Switzerland Chapter is a non-profit organization
that engages on a variety of Internet-related topics, ensuring that it is a
place of possibility, opportunity, and progress that benefits people worldwide.
We provide technically-grounded advice, policy recommendations, and educational
material regarding privacy, security, Free and Open-Source Software, and digital
sovereignty. We also organize informative events and debates like the annual
Public Policy Sessions and participate in collaborative research projects like
the NGI0 Commons Fund.
As a national chapter of the international organization responsible for the .org
domain, ISOC CH acts as a gateway between Switzerland and the international
digital civil society.
You can consider becoming a member (through the main ISOC web site) following
the instructions at https://isoc.ch/membership, or just subscribe to our
newsletter (2-3 announcements per year) by sending a message to contact@isoc.ch
The post Positive Development in Swiss Surveillance (VÜPF and VD-ÜPF) Framework
Debate appeared first on ISOC Switzerland Chapter.
Tag - policy
The European Commission has been asking for feedback from the 6th of January to
the 3rd of February to shape its “European Open Digital Ecosystem Strategy”. In
our submission we stress that it is important to understand that Free and
Open-Source Software (FOSS)
* is the backbone of our digital infrastructure;
* is a global and collaborative phenomenon and that isolating it along
geographic boundaries is counterproductive;
* has to be understood as a symbiotic ecosystem of diverse players (businesses,
public administrations, foundations, academic institutions, and individual
contributors) rather than “just” an economic sector/industry;
* has a variety of strategic and practical benefits over proprietary software
solutions and should therefore be adopted widely by European institutions.
If you’re interested in the topic, we can also recommend you to read the
submissions of the Free Software Foundation Europe and the OSI Europe
Foundation.
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The Internet Society (ISOC) Switzerland Chapter is a non-profit organization
that engages on a variety of Internet-related topics, ensuring that it is a
place of possibility, opportunity, and progress that benefits people worldwide.
We provide technically-grounded advice, policy recommendations, and educational
material regarding privacy, security, Free and Open-Source Software, and digital
sovereignty. We also organize informative events and debates like the annual
Public Policy Sessions and participate in collaborative research projects like
the NGI0 Commons Fund.
As a national chapter of the international organization responsible for the .org
domain, ISOC CH acts as a gateway between Switzerland and the international
digital civil society.
You can consider becoming a member (through the main ISOC web site) following
the instructions at https://isoc.ch/membership, or just subscribe to our
newsletter (2-3 announcements per year) by sending a message to contact@isoc.ch.
The post Our submission to the EU Call for Evidence on the “European Open
Digital Ecosystem Strategy” appeared first on ISOC Switzerland Chapter.
On the 18th of November 2025 two conferences in two European capitals
simultaneously discussed issues pertaining to the buzzword of digital
sovereignty: the DINAcon in Bern, Switzerland and the European Digital
Sovereignty Summit in Berlin, Germany. Despite addressing similar topics, the
conferences could not have been more different in content, however: While Swiss
administrators used the DINAcon to present their implementation efforts with
respect to the free and open-source software and interoperability requirements
outlined in articles 9 and 14 of the EMBAG law, respectively, the European
governments represented in the European Council pitched a very different vision
of digital sovereignty in Berlin: One which emphasizes the competitiveness of
and investment into proprietary European software solutions, most likely at the
expense of consumer protections.
We, as the Switzerland Chapter of the Internet Society (ISOC-CH), are very
concerned about the commercial re-interpretation of the term digital
sovereignty. While supporting local businesses to develop and administer digital
solutions is an essential part of the equation to achieve digital sovereignty,
it must not come at the cost of jeopardizing the ability of states to act
independently now and in the future. The reaction to an outsized dependency on
(state-sponsored) American and Chinese Big Tech firms cannot possibly be an
outsized dependency on (state-sponsored) European or Swiss Big Tech companies.
Apart from ignoring the fact that companies can change domiciles, be bought by
foreign investors or go bankrupt, the “buy European” approach also showcases a
lack of creativity and imaginative power on the part of European politicians who
cannot fathom an alternative to emulating other global powers and reveals a
fundamental misunderstanding about the nature of technological dependencies: The
fact that a software vendor or cloud computing provider is domestic does nothing
to reduce the vendor lock-in effects, the restrictiveness of proprietary
software licenses, and the resulting stifling of competition and innovation.
Simply procuring digital services domestically falls massively short of
achieving digital sovereignty as defined by either the Swiss (with a narrow
focus on the state) or European (with a wider perspective including non-state
actors) regulators:
> “Digital sovereignty requires the necessary control over and ability to act in
> the digital realm to ensure the delivery of state services.” – own translation
> of the Swiss government’s definition of digital sovereignty
> “Digital sovereignty is the ability of Member States to be able to regulate
> their digital infrastructure, data and technologies. It encompasses the
> ability of individuals, businesses and institutions in Europe to act
> independently in the digital world, allowing for autonomous decisions about
> the use, governance, and development of digital systems without undue reliance
> on external actors […].” – taken from the Declaration for European Digital
> Sovereignty
A more encompassing answer as to how ensure digital sovereignty is needed. Any
entity which wants to have control over the digital services it uses and aims to
be able to change them to serve its specific needs should strive to
operationalize the following principles:
* local infrastructure: Having access to geographically local computing
resources, network infrastructure, and electricity is a prerequisite for
being able to exert control over one’s digital services.
* local expertise: Without a motivated, experienced and educated local work
force who can develop, debug and deploy digital services one cannot truly
operate in a self-sovereign manner.
* interoperability: Open standards and open data formats allow for connectivity
between services and reduced switching costs, thereby preventing vendor
lock-ins and increasing one’s agency.
* free and open-source software: The four freedoms of free and open-source
software (use, change, share and improve) give a legal and technical
guarantee to the user to be a self-determined actor rather than a
disenfranchised consumer. Instead of paying lip service to free and
open-source software like the European Declaration for Digital Sovereignty
does by making it optional and conditional,
> “Open-source solutions can play an important role enhancing digital
> sovereignty,
> provided they meet high cybersecurity standards and are complemented by
> reliable proprietary technologies where appropriate.”
policy makers should recognize that actual digital sovereignty cannot be
achieved without a firm commitment to free and open-source software.
Operationalizing these criteria is obviously harder than simply procuring
domestic digital products. It requires new capabilities, organizational
structures and cultural changes. But unlike the simplistic “buy domestic”
strategy – whose political appeal in times of economic and geopolitical turmoil
is obvious – they actually provide a path to achieve what the Declaration for
European Digital Sovereignty sets out as a goal: ensuring “the ability of
individuals, businesses and institutions in Europe to act independently in the
digital world”.
As an NGI-0 consortium member, ISOC-CH will continue highlighting the advantages
of free and open-source software, open standards, and open data formats for
attaining digital sovereignty to policy makers, administrators, educators, and
the wider public. We are happy to support Swiss decision makers on municipal,
cantonal and federal levels with our expertise and network to take steps towards
true digital sovereignty together.
The post The state of discussions on digital sovereignty in Switzerland and
Europe appeared first on ISOC Switzerland Chapter.
Get a ticket for the Swiss Citizens' Dialogue on the Future of Internet
organised by Internet Society Switzerland Chapter!
The post Swiss Citizens’ Dialogue on the Future of Internet: Sign Up Information
appeared first on ISOC Switzerland Chapter.