Tag: International

  • Evening reception at the Embassy of Finland in Oslo

    Evening reception at the Embassy of Finland in Oslo

    November 4 @ 6:00 pm 8:00 pm CET

    (EVENT) In connection with the North European Cyber Days, the Embassy of Finland in Oslo is organising an evening networking reception for conference organisers and partners. 

    Attendance is by invitation only due to the limited capacity of approximately 40 guests. 

    Building on previous Nordic Collaboration events, this evening reception will provide an opportunity for partners from industry, finance, research, and public sector to further explore some of Europe’s leading initiatives aimed at developing competitive, secure, and “trustworthy” digital technologies.

    The high-level conference, supported by the European Cyber Security Organization (ECSO)North European Cybersecurity Cluster (NECC) and the National Cybersecurity Coordination Centers (NCCs) of the Nordic and Baltic Regions, will bring together key stakeholders from cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and critical sectors to foster collaboration on innovation, investment, procurement, and export initiatives.

    Following arrivals and registration, the program will include a 45-minute session of presentations, followed by a 60-minute buffet dinner to facilitate networking. 

    Register for the reception using the event registration link and we will contact you with confirmation details. 

    Event Webpage:  North European Cyber Days 2025.

    Registration Link: https://nettskjema.no/a/north-european-cyber-days-2025  

    Free admission

    Embassy of Finland in Oslo

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    Ambassadors residence

    Thomas Heftyes g. 3
    Oslo, 0244
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  • Welcome reception at Oslo City Hall

    Welcome reception at Oslo City Hall

    November 3 @ 6:00 pm 7:30 pm CET

    (EVENT) In connection with the North European Cyber Days 2025, the City of Oslo is hosting an evening welcome reception for up to 200 people.

    The event is free and open for all, but conference attendees will be prioritised.

    Register for the reception using the event registration link and we will contact you with confirmation details.

    Event Webpage:  North European Cyber Days 2025.

    Registration Link: https://nettskjema.no/a/north-european-cyber-days-2025  

    VentureNet

    Ambassadors residence

    Thomas Heftyes g. 3
    Oslo, 0244
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  • LP Breakfast at Nobel Peace Center

    LP Breakfast at Nobel Peace Center

    October 22 @ 8:30 am 11:00 am CEST

    (EVENT)

    Oslo Business Region. “LP Breakfast at Nobel Peace Center”. Accessed 09.09.2025. https://www.oiw.no/event/LP-Breakfast-at-Nobel-Peace-Center

    Together with leading LPs Farvatn and Ferd, Oslo Innovation Week is inviting Nordic and international LPs, and a select group of top international VCs,  to a breakfast session at the Nobel Peace Center.

    Expect the perfect mix of insight and networking with some of the most experienced LPs and VCs across Northern Europe at one of Oslo’s most iconic institutions.

    The event is invite-only and exclusively for investors. Priority is given to LPs with active investments.

    Oslo Business Region

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    Ambassadors residence

    Thomas Heftyes g. 3
    Oslo, 0244
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  • North-Atlantic Angel Investor Summit

    North-Atlantic Angel Investor Summit

    October 21 @ 5:00 pm 7:00 pm CEST

    (EVENT)

    NorBAN. “North-Atlantic Angel Investor Summit”. Accessed 09.09.2025. https://www.oiw.no/event/North-Atlantic-Angel-Investor-Summit

    Gain fresh perspectives, forge connections, and help shape the future of early-stage funding in the Nordics at this exclusive angel investor summit hosted by Business Angel Networks from across the North Atlantic area.

    At this summit we will explore emerging trends within and across the North-Atlantic startup ecosystems through a series of lightning talks on the state of angel investments and what startup needs, as well as having a fireside chat on the future of Angel Investing!

    NorBAN (Norwegian Business Angel Network)

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    Ambassadors residence

    Thomas Heftyes g. 3
    Oslo, 0244
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  • Impact Beyond Borders: Scaling Nordic Sustainability in the UK

    Impact Beyond Borders: Scaling Nordic Sustainability in the UK

    October 21 @ 4:00 pm 6:30 pm CEST

    (EVENT)

    Goodwille. “Impact Beyond Borders: Scaling Nordic Sustainability in the UK”. Accessed 09.09.2025. https://www.oiw.no/event/Impact-Beyond-Borders–Scaling-Nordic-Sustainability-in-the-UK

    The British Embassy in Oslo, Nordic Edge and Goodwille welcome business leaders, investors, and ecosystem stakeholders to an exclusive networking event, with the aim of building bridges in the green transition. 

    We’ll be gathering the most innovative Nordic businesses and forward-thinking UK and Norwegian investors for an afternoon of insightful panel discussions and networking opportunities, all with the objective of creating a more sustainable future.

    Ambassadors residence

    Thomas Heftyes g. 3
    Oslo, 0244
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  • Data Space Technologies

    Data Space Technologies

    Haukaas C.A., Fredriksen P.M., Abie H., Pirbhulal S., Katsikas S., Lech C.T., Roman D. (2025). “INN-the-Loop: Human-Guided Artificial Intelligence.” 12-14.

    Data space technologies are key enablers of AI and data-driven value creation because they address fundamental challenges with data system integration, data curation, verifiability, security, and privacy.

    A data space consists of common standards for organizing and exchanging data and a set of technologies that adhere to those standards. Data space technologies can be open-source or proprietary, but they must adhere to common data spaces standards and rules. Common standards are needed to ensure that systems and data are interoperable, and can utilize common infrastructure and services, for example to manage identities, system access and data exchange in compliance with European digital regulations.

    Data space technologies with digital trust management frameworks and digital marketplaces are being developed to enable a more open and equitable digital ecosystems in Europe, where data and digital assets can be securely exchanged, reused and improved over time.

    The International Data Spaces Association, Gaia-X, FIWARE, Big Data Value Association and OASC (Open and Agile Smart Cities and Communities) are a few examples of organizations that collectively represent more than 1000 member organisations, 400+ cities, and 100+ national hubs in Europe, Asia, and the Americas that are working on projects to develop common data space architectures and technologies.

    Smart city and community initiatives are particularly relevant for Data Spaces because cities, regions, municipalities, and the public sector need to continuously improve the cost-effectiveness of services across several critical sectors. AI has great potential to support increased productivity, sustainability and community engagement in digital and green transformation, but solutions are needed to enable secure data exchange and deployment of trustworthy AI across critical sectors and regions. The Living in EU initiative aims to promote citizen-centric collaboration and re-use of solutions, products, and services across a common digital market to avoid duplicating efforts and expenditure that result in data silos and fragmented infrastructure. Living in EU is promoted the European Commission, the European Committee of Regions, The Council of European Municipalities and Regions (CEMR), The European Regions Research and Innovation Network (ERRIN), The European Network of Living Labs (ENoLL), OASC, and Eurocities, a network of over 200 of Europe’s largest cities representing over 150 million people across 38 countries.

    A data space consists of tools that adhere to common standards defined in the Data Space Blueprint:

    • DSSC Blueprint: The Data Space Support Center (DSSC) blueprint is a comprehensive set of guidelines to support implementation, deployment and management of data spaces. The Blueprint consists of key concepts, a starter kit, glossary, a collection of data space standards and the following organisation and technical building blocks (DSSC 2024)[i]:
      • Business, governance and legal building blocks provide guidance to new entrants and operators of infrastructure, software, services and technologies that comply with data spaces standards. This support includes but not limited to guidance on choices in design of business model, data products, organisational form, regulatory compliance and contractual frameworks that are supported by services and software.
      • Technical building blocks are divided into foundational standards, control and data planes for exchanging data, and data space services for implementing the technical building blocks. These standards for technologies and services are designed to ensure data interoperability, data sovereignty and trust, and provide enablers for value creation from data, which is one of the ultimate goals of a data space (DSSC 2024).
    • Decentralised identifiers (DID) and verifiable credentials (VC): a key technical building block for Data Spaces is the DID standard developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), an international standards organization founded in 1994 by Tim-Berners Lee, the inventor of the world wide web. A DID is a universal resource identifier (URI) for an entity (e.g., a person, organization, thing, concept, data model, algorithm, abstract entity, etc.) (W3C 2022).[ii] URIs are used to organize data and services in standardized machine-readable ontologies and catalogues. This enables systems find information and navigate ontologies and data catalogues across large networks of distributed systems. A decentralised identifier (DID) goes a step further by providing a method to prove ownership/control over an entity/subject/concept. A DID points to a DID document that uses cryptographic mechanisms to verify credentials related to ownership and rights to create, access and modify information. This enables a controlling entity to create and modify their own universal identifiers independent of centralised registries because the controlling entity can use verifiable credentials (VCs) to prove their own identity and to prove their rights to create, modify and access information that is represented by the DID. VCs provide a set of tamper-evident claims, which supports verifiability, traceability and accountability in digital information, also known as data provenance (W3C 2025).[iii] This independent control over verifiable information is known as self-sovereignty and self-sovereign identity (SSI), and it has potential to revolutionize the internet by making more information verifiable, machine-readable and more easily discoverable across decentralised systems, provided that common semantic web standards are followed for organizing and accessing information.
    • Privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs): A DID document can have one or more different representations of information describing a past, current, or desired state of the DID subject. The ability to provide multiple representations of information is an enabler for PETs because a DID document can utilize different methods for sharing verifiable information without necessarily transferring data or revealing underlying data. One example is secure multi-party computation (SMPC) with full homomorphic encryption, which was used by two European hospitals in a pilot project of the European Health Data Space to securely analyse health data for cancer patients without transferring underlying health data to the hospitals (Ballhausen 2024).[iv] Another example is a zero-knowledge proof (ZKP) to prove that a person has a required credential, such as an education certificate, valid driver’s license, or fulfils a minimum age requirement, without revealing details of the person’s age, date of birth, address, or other unnecessary information. DIDs can also strengthen privacy and security by using attribute-based encryption and access control to authorize access to specific information based on a dynamic set of conditions, such as the privacy preferences of the DID owner and levels of digital trust or cyber risk to systems handling information in the digital value chain. In summary, technical standards for DIDs, VCs, and Data Spaces, in combination with EU digital regulations, create a great opportunity for innovation in PETs to address security and privacy risks of AI-enabled systems in critical sectors.
    • Technical standards have been collected and organized into the following categories:
      • Data Interoperability standards
      • Data Sovereignty and Trust standards
      • Data Value Creation standards
    • DSSC Toolbox: The Toolbox is a curated catalogue of solution implementations (software and non-software tools) that are aligned with the DSSC Blueprint and have passed the Toolbox validation scheme. The
      • Toolbox contains open and closed solutions for technical and organisational functionalities and can be accessed as data space services (DSSC 2024).
      • The Toolbox validation scheme is a self-assessment scheme that enables new solutions and solution providers to be listed in the Toolbox.
    • A digital marketplace is a common way to generate value in a data space (DSSC 2024).[1] The DS Blueprint describes functional specifications for digital marketplaces as part of the Data Value Creation standard and technical building block. The standard enables secure and efficient data exchange and digital transactions using advanced features for data catalogue management with DIDs. A data catalogue using DIDs makes product offerings machine-readable and more easily discoverable within a data space and across data spaces and marketplaces. A marketplace can also “establish a trusted relationship between a data product provider and any user who has searched, found and selected one or more data products from this provider in the data space. It provides the tools required to negotiate conditions for the delivery and use of the products, monitor the process and store all the relevant information, i.e. everything needed to ensure the journey of the provider and the user goes smoothly.” (DSSC 2024).
    • Minimum Interoperability Mechanisms (MIMs) are being developed by the OASC in a standard recommendation to the ITU Telecommunications Standardization Sector (ITU-T) to support data interoperability in Data Spaces for Sustainable and Smart Cities and Communities (DS4SSCC) and ensure compliance with the EU Interoperability Act (EC 2024)[2]. The MIMs Overview provides a description of the concept and role of the following MIMs (OASC 2024)[3]:
      • MIM 1: Context Information
      • MIM 2: Data Models
      • MIM 3: Contracts
      • MIM 4: Trust
      • MIM 5: Transparency
      • MIM 6: Security
      • MIM 7: Places
      • MIM 8: Indicators
      • MIM 9: Analytics
      • MIM 10: Resources
    • MIMs Resources provide additional support for public sector and local administrations in cities and smart communities to learn and experiment with digital transformation initiatives:
      • CITYxCITY Academy: includes an online portal with access to experts, tools and courses.
      • CITYxCITY Catalogue: global collection of deployed solutions, products and best practice.
      • CITYxCITY Festival: annual networking event for the OASC community.
      • Living-in.EU MIMs Plus: an expansion of MIMs with additional technical stacks, tools and management standards for local administrations intended to support broad up-scaling of digital transformation projects in line with the Living in EU initiative, which aims to serve 300 million Europeans. The ‘plus’ banner refers to European specifications and initiatives, such as EIF4SCC, ISA2, CEF, INSPIRE, EIP-SCC, ELISA, LORDI, DIGISER (OASC 2022)[v].

    For smaller organisations, such as startups, SMEs and municipalities, data spaces can eliminate the need to make large upfront investments in digital infrastructure for advanced digital platforms and digital twins. Open-source technologies and smart data models can be reused as a foundation platform, instead of reinventing systems, data models, communications protocols, services, and security controls. This frees more time and financing to focus on value-creation, paying startups and smaller specialist service providers to integrate components and customize software and user interfaces to customer needs.

    The concept of distributed computing is not new, but what distinguishes European data space initiatives from hyperscaler ecosystems is common technical standards to ensure interoperability that reduce vendor lock-in, and enable collaboration to improve cybersecurity, data integrity, and fair economic value creation, while complying with important EU digital regulations for privacy, safety, and cyber resilience.


    [i] DSSC (Data Spaces Support Centre) (2024). Data Spaces Blueprint v1.5. Data Spaces Support Centre. https://dssc.eu/space/bv15e/766061169/Data+Spaces+Blueprint+v1.5+-+Home

    . Accessed 22.01.2025.

    [1] DSSC (Data Spaces Support Centre) (2024). Data Spaces Blueprint v1.5. Data Spaces Support Centre. https://dssc.eu/space/BVE/357076678/Marketplace+Functional+Specifications. Accessed 22.01.2025.
    [2] European Commission. Press release 26.08.2024. Minimal Interoperability Mechanisms: Advancing Europe’s digital future. https://data.europa.eu/en/news-events/news/minimal-interoperability-mechanisms-advancing-europes-digital-future
    [3] Open and Agile Smart Cities and Communities (OASC) (2024). Draft Recommention ITU-T Y.MIM. May 2024. https://mims.oascities.org/mims/y.mim-overview
    [i] DSSC (Data Spaces Support Centre) (2024). Data Spaces Blueprint v1.5. Data Spaces Support Centre. https://dssc.eu/space/bv15e/766061169/Data+Spaces+Blueprint+v1.5+-+Home. Accessed 22.01.2025.

    [ii] Sporny M., Longley D., Sabadello M., Reed D., Steele O., Allen C.; World-Wide Web Consortium (W3C) (2022). Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) v1.0. W3C Recommendation 19.07.2022. https://www.w3.org/TR/did-core/

    [iii] Sporny M., Longley D., Chadwick D., Herman I.; World-Wide Web Consortium (W3C) (2025). Verifiable Credentials Data Model v2.0. W3C Candidate Recommendation Draft. 27.01.2025. https://www.w3.org/TR/vc-data-model-2.0/

    [iv] Ballhausen, H., Corradini, S., Belka, C. et al. (2024). Privacy-friendly evaluation of patient data with secure multiparty computation in a European pilot study. npj Digit. Med. 7, 280 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-024-01293-4

    [v] LI.EU Technical sub-group chaired by OASC (2022). MIMs Plus version 5.0 final draft. June 2022. https://living-in.eu/mimsplus

  • European Cluster for Securing Critical Infrastructures (ECSCI)

    European Cluster for Securing Critical Infrastructures (ECSCI)

    March 3, 2022 @ 8:00 am December 31, 2026 @ 5:00 pm CET

    (NETWORK)

    ECSCI. “ECSCI”. Accessed 14.08.2025. https://www.ecsci.eu.

    The main objective of the ECSCI cluster is to create synergies and foster emerging disruptive solutions to security issues via cross-projects collaboration and innovation. Research activities will focus on how to protect critical infrastructures and services, highlighting the different approaches between the clustered projects and establishing tight and productive connections with closely related and complementary EU funded projects. To promote the activities of the cluster, ECSCI will organize international conferences, and national or international workshops, involving both policy makers, industry and academic, practitioners, and representatives from the European Commission.  

  • North European Cybersecurity Cluster

    North European Cybersecurity Cluster

    January 1, 2025 @ 8:00 am December 31, 2026 @ 5:00 pm CET

    (NETWORK)

    NECC. “NECC.” Accessed 14.08.2025. https://necc.network.

    The North European Cybersecurity Cluster (NECC) promotes information security and cybersecurity-related cooperation and collaboration in the Northern European region in order to enhance integration into the European Digital Single Market.

    The NECC has created a trusted competence network with various tested collaboration models among companies, academia, public sector and end-users. The cluster-type collaboration model is beneficial for all participating stakeholders and supports the EU’s contractual Public Private Partnership (cPPP).

    The NECC will be working towards more compelling business, cybersecurity and research environment for attracting more investments, resources and new innovation into the region.

    North European Cybersecurity Cluster

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  • European Cyber Security Organisation (ECSO)

    European Cyber Security Organisation (ECSO)

    January 1, 2016 @ 8:00 am December 31, 2026 @ 5:00 pm CET

    (NETWORK)

    ECSO. “ECSO”. Accessed 14.08.2025. https://ecs-org.eu.

    The right place to be for cybersecurity in Europe

    The European Cyber Security Organisation (ECSO) is a European, cross-sectoral membership organisation that contributes to developing cybersecurity communities and building the European cybersecurity ecosystem.

    ECSO federates the European Cybersecurity public and private sector, including large companies, SMEs and start-ups, research centres, universities, end-users and operators of essential services, clusters and associations, as well as the local, regional and national public administrations across the European Union Members States and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA).

    Mission

    • ECSO contributes to Europe’s Digital Sovereignty & Strategic Autonomy and to strenghtening its  cyber resilience by:
    • Bringing together the private and public sectors, facilitating their dialogue and joint actions
    • Empowering communities and shaping the European cybersecurity ecosystem
    • Federating and providing a platform for collaboration for various stakeholders

    European Cyber Security Organisation (ECSO)

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    Ambassadors residence

    Thomas Heftyes g. 3
    Oslo, 0244
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  • Data Space for Smart and Sustainable Communities

    Data Space for Smart and Sustainable Communities

    October 1, 2023 @ 8:00 am September 30, 2026 @ 5:00 pm CEST

    (PROJECT)

    European data space for smart communities (DS4SSCC-DEP). “DS4SSCC”. Accessed 13.08.2025. https://www.ds4sscc.eu/home.

    DS4SSCC–DEP is funded by the European Union Digital Europe Work Programme 2021-2022 under Grant Agreement No. 101123342. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Commission. Neither the European Union nor the European Commission can be held responsible for them.

    The European Data Space for Smart Communities (DS4SSCC-DEP) initiative is a pivotal deployment following the preparatory action for a Data Space for Sustainable and Smart Cities and Communities (DS4SSCC). 

    Emphasising sustainability aspects and diversity in communities, DS4SSCC developed a multi-stakeholder data governance scheme, created a blueprint for the European DS4SSCC, delivered priority datasets, and developed a roadmap towards a mature DS4SSCC.

    DS4SSCC-DEP’s vision revolves around creating a well-governed federated territorial, place-based data space for smart communities available for developers and infrastructure providers, aligning with the prospects outlined in Europe’s Digital Decade objectives. This approach distinguishes itself from sectoral data spaces by encompassing diverse domains, and underpinning governance across all levels of society.

    Open & Agile Smart Cities and Communities (OASC)

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