Articles
Writing on cloud infrastructure, digital sovereignty and open systems.
- When Cyber Capability Becomes Something You Have to Be Granted Anthropic withheld access to Mythos, its advanced cyber AI model, from the EU while sharing it with US institutions. The story is not about nationality — it is about structural dependency, and what sovereignty has to mean now that frontier cyber AI sits closer to strategic infrastructure than to productivity tooling.
- One bad signature took down major .de sites for three hours On 5 May 2026 a single malformed signature blacked out .de for hours. The same class of failure is structurally available to .no, .se and .dk.
- Telia's typo explanation raises bigger telecom-trust questions Telia now explains the location-data exposure as a configuration error: P-Access-Network-Info became P-Access-Network-Id. That may explain the mechanism. It does not explain why sensitive cell-level context was allowed to cross a telecom trust boundary.
- The incident that changed how I think about trust A personal reflection on a 2024 supplier data incident, and why transparency, accountability and follow-up matter more than the failure itself.
- Telecom signaling is still a location privacy problem Ofcom and Citizen Lab show how mobile-network signaling can still expose location-sensitive data. Telia Norway adds a separate SIP/IMS example.
- Cloud waste is not just a climate problem Hidden cloud waste does not just raise carbon footprint. It also increases cost, reduces visibility and can create security risk when infrastructure is forgotten.
- Finland’s state IT breach now raises espionage concerns Finland is investigating a breach at its state IT provider as suspected espionage after police said the stolen dataset may affect national security and cause harm.
- Why I chose to expose what most people hide I don’t trust perfect systems. This is why we built a Trust Center — to document what actually happens behind the scenes.
- Sovereignty is not something you claim — this is how we approach it Sovereignty is often treated as a claim. In practice, it’s about understanding control, dependencies and what actually happens when you’re the one running the system.