Planting multiple electronic flags

by Simon Black · 10 comments

August 5, 2010
Vilnius, Lithuania

Our website was down yesterday. You probably noticed… I think it was down for over 12-hours. Now, I’m normally a pretty laid-back guy, and there’s not a whole lot that bothers me. But when technology that’s supposed to make our lives easier suddenly doesn’t work, I become unglued.

After 12-hours, the tech support folks at our hosting company finally determined the root cause of the issue: a faulty network cable. That’s it… nothing sinister, nothing complicated, just a 19th century solution to a 21st century problem.

It’s amazing how reliant on technology we have all become; this is not necessarily a bad thing. Every successive generation in the history of the world has had its own emerging technology that became integrated into their society.

Furthermore, each caused the older generations and social critics of the day to bemoan how that new fangled technology was ruining their civilization, making people ‘soft’, etc. Electricity, indoor plumbing, the telephone, etc. were all met with resistance by some measure of the population.

The chief difference between then and now is that our technology, at least in the consumer’s perspective, is in digital or electronic form… and that the rate of technological progression is exponential (according to Moore’s Law). Naturally, the government has been keen to adapt (somewhat reactively) to these changes.

Curiously, a lot of people think that the government actually spearheads and innovates technological advances. This may have been true 50-years ago when many of the world’s brightest tech minds aspired to government service. Today they aspire to Apple, Google, and their own startups.

Governments now rely on the private sector for their technology needs, and the latest issue with Blackberry is an excellent case in point. For its enterprise service, the popular data handset uses a series of complex encryption algorithms that are frankly too difficult for most government security agencies to break.

So, instead of spending all of that time, money, and effort trying to break Blackberry’s encryption, a handful of governments have issued its maker, Canada-based Research in Motion (RIM), an ultimatum: hand over your encryption key, or we’ll ban your product.

The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, among others, are the first to do this. Ironically, while authoritarian governments may or may not be successful in a deal with RIM, they are still going to be behind the learning curve when it comes to new technology.

Simply put, the market will continue to adapt, and new technologies will emerge that thwart the best efforts of government to intercept every bit of data flying through the air.

In my opinion, though, this Blackberry case underscores a critical point that we have discussed before– technology is an important flag that you should consider planting in order to diversify your sovereign risk.

For example, if your email provider is based in the same jurisdiction where you live, work, and hold citizenship, the chances of being locked out of your account, or having your private messages used as evidence against you, increase dramatically.

Switching over to an offshore email provider can be done at no cost, an often you don’t even need to change your email address.

For technology entrepreneurs, I would strongly advise planting multiple flags and spreading your sovereign risk across multiple jurisdictions; for example, you can base your company in one country, your web server in another, your email server in another, your bank account in another, and your merchant processor in another.

This safeguards your business, as well as your information, from the ridiculous and often unpredictable acts of impetuous bureaucrats who know no other means but to confiscate and regulate their way to achieving their own agenda.

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  • Barry

    Any good and recommended offshore locations for site hosting and payment processing?

  • Sovereign Thom

    Ok Simon, my question has to do with online sales, payment processing and repatriation of funds.

    If I’m a web entrepreneur with my servers in the Netherlands, my business in Singapore and my bank in Panama…

    Where should the payment processor be?

    Where would the “sale” take place?

    Where would the funds reside ( the country of the processor or the country of the bank )?

    I’m further assuming that services like PayPal and Google Checkout are just bad all around. Any comment there?

    Thanks for all the terrific information!

    - Sovereign Thom

  • Kbox57

    what foreign email providers would you recommend ?

    • Who is John Galt?

      fastmail.fm is quite good…

  • K.Gabriel

    If your hosting company had your website down for over 12 hours due to a faulty network cable, you need a new provider. They should have been able to provide either a failover solution (esp if they are leveraging virtualization) or in the case of total server failure have a new machine back online in a few hours at most.

    I would be willing to discuss some strategies to help keep you online for free. Personally, I want to make sure your advice is highly available, as it is very useful to me. :)

  • Charlie

    “For technology entrepreneurs, I would strongly advise planting multiple flags and spreading your sovereign risk across multiple jurisdictions…”
    Very good advice, and one issue you have missed with regards to spreading risk is that such diversification of support services will help mitigate the effects of localized social disruptions or natural disasters…

  • Sunny

    Simon, as you are such a perpetual traveler, is there any place in this world you would still call a…”Home”? Or is Home where You are?!
    With kind regards,
    Sunny
    RunAlone.com

  • Joe

    Sad story, I have experienced being scammed by a company who have server in Panama. They went far enough to try get me giving my ssn. After few trials, I got this company cutting out. The next thing, they are now play bait and switch with me.

    Lesson of this story is being sovereign can protect you. If you plan going down this route, please do it for a good reason within legal framework.

    The company I mentioned could hurt our sovereign ability to enhance personal freedom and personal privacy due to them abusing the system which can bring government in to regulate it more.

  • Jai

    Like Sovereign Thom, there are probably lots of Internet Entrepreneurs who need to find RELIABLE, safe, inexpensive hosting/servers, commercial banks, payment processors, place for company formation, etc. Putting all the pieces in place can be complicated and “put you all a-dither.”

    Any chance of a Quick Guide to the Multi-flagged I'net Entrepreneur? Any suggestions on various elements? And a tax-free way to get your income to wherever-you-are so you can pay your rent, biz expenses, groceries, all those “little” survival issues? Everybody has to start somewhere – and all too often with little-to-no money… besides, if you want profits, you keep your costs as close to zero as possible!

  • SovereignAl

    Like Sovereign Thom, there are probably lots of Internet Entrepreneurs who need to find RELIABLE, safe, inexpensive hosting/servers, commercial banks, payment processors, place for company formation, etc. Putting all the pieces in place can be complicated and “put you all a-dither.”

    Any chance of a Quick Guide to the Multi-flagged I'net Entrepreneur? Any suggestions on various elements? And a tax-free way to get your income to wherever-you-are so you can pay your rent, biz expenses, groceries, all those “little” survival issues?

    Great question Jai, this would make a VERY popular book Simon 9or anyone else that has the answers) please post here if you know of a reliable resource with these answers

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