Finlandia It is the Country in the world that has the highest sovereign digital infrastructure adoption indexaccording to the results of the First Digital Sovereignty Index of NextCloud, which measures the use of self -healing technologies in more than 50 countries. In it, according to the data at the end of July, Finland has obtained a score of 64.5 out of 100, followed by Germany, with 53.85, and from the Netherlands, with 36.32.
The EU average is at 16.31and the score that Spain has obtained is below her: 7.01 on 100. Also below the average are countries such as the United Kingdom (9,21), Belgium (7,15), Italy (6.5) and Denmark (6.5). Canada, with a 14.94, and the United States, with a 14.88, are also below that average.
Above the European Union average are, in addition to the first classified, France (25,1), Austria (20,23) and Switzerland (23,32). The total score of France is mainly due to its high number of self -lust and infrastructure tools, such as Plex and Webmin, but it is lagging behind in all other applications, in eighth place in data storage and project management, and in eleventh in communication tools.
Baltic countries, known for their advances in electronic administration, are located just above the EU average in digital sovereignty: Latvia achieves a score of 16.63, Estonia of 18.4 and Lithuania of 16.1.
The digital sovereignty index, or DSI, shows the status of digital infrastructure, and analyzes the adoption and status of more than 50 popular self -eligible software solutions to accommodate files, work in groups, communicate or manage projects in more than half a hundred countries and in more than 7.2 million servers. In addition, its score shows the number of implementations per 100,000 citizens in relation to other countries.
Of course, from NextCloud they point out that the index is based on the number of deployments, not on their size. And since SMEs and private users who use servers exceed largely organizations and companies, the index to a greater extent the elections of individuals and SMEs than those of governments or large corporations.