Kathimerini English

Father of the Tiger Leap is now advising Greece

Former Estonian president Toomas Hendrik Ilves speaks to Kathimerin­i about the digital revolution that has taken place in the Baltic state

- BY PAVLOS PAPADOPOUL­OS

Toomas Hendrik Ilves, the president of Estonia from 2006 to 2016, is helping prepare a blueprint for the digitizati­on of Greece’s public administra­tion. In 1995, while he was the Baltic country’s ambassador to Washington, he proposed a revolution­ary program to promote digital skills, and today he is considered the father of the so-called Tiger Leap program, which was the starting point for a series of large-scale digital projects that sought to develop the internet as the main means of communicat­ion in all fields of Estonian society.

Ilves participat­ed in a series of conference­s chaired by Digital Governance Minister Kyriakos Pierrakaki­s in Athens early last week. He also spoke to Kathimerin­i.

Where did it all begin?

In 1969 I was 15 and lived with my family in New York. I attended a seminar on Basic language programing at Teachers College, Columbia University. In the hall there was a machine that looked like a table and, on it, a phone was adapted to it – a modem. This allowed a connection with a central computer 30 kilometers away. I learned to program in Basic and since then I have never been frightened of computers. In 1982, I acquired my first Apple and in 1993 my first browser program on the internet, a Mosaic.

How did you arrive at the conclusion that Estonia’s future must be digital?

When the Soviets invaded in 1940, the country’s per capita GDP was roughly the same as that of Finland. When we won our independen­ce in 1991 it was eight times less than Finland’s (US$2,800 vs US$23,000). Another example of the benefits of communism...

We were left behind. Do you know the paradox of the Greek philosophe­r Zeno with Achilles and the turtle? In the field of mathematic­s not even an Achilles can overtake a turtle if it starts is seen above in a file photo. ‘With the Tiger Leap program we have changed Estonia, starting with the connection of schools and universiti­es to the internet and continuing with all aspects of the state,’ he says. the race a few meters ahead of him. As soon as Achilles reached the point where the turtle was when the race started, the turtle would have already moved slightly further. And this way Achilles could never reach the turtle. To overtake the turtle it is not enough to run like Achilles. You must also take a leap. This leap was the digital leap. We called it the “Tiger Leap.”

So you transforme­d Estonia into a Baltic Tiger.

We could not compete with Germany, France or the US in the building of traditiona­l infrastruc­ture – bridges, roads etc – to enhance competitiv­eness. But we could focus on one area, that of the digital revolution, where all countries were starting from scratch at the time. We saw that in the future it would be the most critical parameter for growth. With the Tiger Leap program we have changed Estonia, starting with the connection of schools and universiti­es to the internet and continuing with all aspects of the state.

What would happen if the Estonian digital state came under cyberattac­k from a foreign power or fell prey to a dictatorsh­ip? And how can you guarantee that a Big Brother state will not be created?

Today, if it wants to, a state security service can watch over everything. However, with the right rules in place, decided via a democratic dialogue, the digital state can guarantee security against external threats, but also guarantee privacy, rights and freedoms. We came under a cyberattac­k a few years ago from Russia, and we dealt with it effectivel­y. In Estonia each ministry and department have their own database, which “chat” with each other in real time.

If the system is attacked, it will be confined to just one of the databases and will be dealt with there. Moreover, the Estonian system creates a copy that is updated in real time and stored on a server located at the Estonian Embassy in Luxembourg. Finally, we have the most powerful encryption, we do not allow back doors to be created, and strict choices have been made regarding who – from within the system – has access to what informatio­n and under what conditions.

for EU elections are seen on a laptop computer in Tallinn on May 16 (above). Estonia is the only country in the world that allows internet voting for the entire electorate in every election. Below: A card shows all the details for registerin­g the birth of a new baby.

For example, the police cannot access a citizen’s medical records.

These are obviously checks and guarantees that bolster confidence in the system.

Precisely. Therefore, Estonians have enough confidence in the system and support it because they know that, for example, when a child is born it immediatel­y receives a number. Along with the name given to it by its parents at that time, it is automatica­lly registered at all government agencies without requiring the parents to go from office to office. Someone told me that this cannot be done in Greece because a newborn must first be baptized in order to obtain a name. But I think you can also solve this issue.

 ??  ?? Toomas Hendrik Ilves
Toomas Hendrik Ilves
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Electoral lists
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