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Lesson 12 min 20 XP

Data Sovereignty and Digital Borders

The global battle over where data is stored, who can access it, and how nations assert control over digital information.

The Push for Data Localization

Data sovereignty refers to the idea that data is subject to the laws of the country where it is collected or stored. As data has become central to economic value, national security, and surveillance, governments are increasingly demanding that data about their citizens be stored within their borders.

Russia's 2015 data localization law requires companies to store Russian citizens' data on servers in Russia. India's proposed data protection framework includes similar requirements for sensitive personal data. China's Cybersecurity Law (2017) and Data Security Law (2021) establish comprehensive data localization requirements and restrict cross-border data transfers. Even the EU's GDPR, while not requiring localization, effectively restricts data transfers to countries that don't meet European privacy standards.