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Interoperable Europe Act
EU regulation on interoperability of public services From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Interoperable Europe Act (IEA)[1] is an EU regulation on the administration of public services among member states and EU bodies.[2]
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Background
The European Interoperability Framework (EIF) was published in 2004 but it was not legally binding.[3][4]
The European Union set a target that 100% of key public services would be available online by 2030.[5]
Due to interoperability, the EU Digital COVID Certificate facilitated travel between different jurisdictions within the EU during the pandemic.[6]
Provisions
The legislation builds upon the EIF.[7]
The act establishes the Interoperable Europe Portal as a central hub for monitoring integration between different public administrations.[8]
The act requires that the de facto choice for public bodies' internet technology decisions should be a combination of free (libre) software and open standards.[9]
The IEA does not define interoperability as merely a technical problem.[4][7]
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References
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