A Digital Embassy extends a nation's sovereignty beyond its borders — critical data and systems hosted under that nation's flag and law, in a secure facility on neutral or friendly territory. It is resilience against disaster, conflict, and coercion: the state's digital backbone keeps running even if the ground beneath it does not.
A contract cannot guarantee that data stays under a nation's control — the location, the keys, and the network perimeter do. Digital Embassies give a state somewhere to put its most sensitive systems where it owns all three, even when that somewhere sits outside its own borders.
Registries, payments, and identity systems keep running through natural disaster, conflict, or infrastructure failure at home.
A legal framework grants the host nation sovereign control over the facility — the same way a physical embassy is treated as national territory.
Hybrid post-quantum cryptography, HSMs, and QRNGs protect archives whose sensitivity windows are measured in decades, not years.
Each model ships the full Navon security stack — HSMs, QRNGs, hybrid PQC, the crypto-agility engine. The differentiation is the sovereignty model, the connectivity posture, and the physical context.
| Model ANational Vault | Model BData Embassy | Model COffline Quantum Pod | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Location | On-prem, within national territory | Geopolitically neutral third jurisdiction | Mobile or fixed · air-gapped |
| Sovereignty | Full sovereign control by host nation | Extraterritorial sovereignty via legal framework | Complete physical and network isolation |
| Connectivity | Connected · QKD-secured inter-site links | Connected · encrypted cross-border links | Air-gapped · no external network access |
| Primary use | National registries · CBDC · defence systems | Disaster recovery · cross-border resilience | Elections · currency issuance · classified research |
| Assurance level | Highest | High | Maximum (isolation) |
We work with governments and central banks to design Digital Embassies around their continuity, sovereignty, and compliance requirements. Tell us what you need to protect.