Apr 1, 2018
One of Estonia’s first “e-residents” explains what it means to have digital citizenship
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: economics, internet
Three years in, what I find most incredible about e-Residency is that it actually works.
Estonia’s quest to become a “digital nation”
To better understand how e-Residency came about, let’s go back almost 30 years, to 1991. Estonia had just won independence from the Soviet Union and was in the early stages of building a market-oriented economy from scratch. At the time, leaders were quick to identify the potential of the internet and open source collaboration tools (interestingly this was less out of principle, and more for the simple reason that they had no money to pay for Microsoft Office). They decided to become the world’s premier “digital nation.” A favorite quote I’ve heard in Estonia: “What do you think of when you hear the word Slovenia? Nothing. Precisely! We don’t want to be Slovenia.”