Trust Center
Swedish-owned. Data stored in Sweden. Certified security. Open standards. Here you will find information about how we protect data, meet regulatory requirements and build a platform trusted by organizations with the highest demands for security, compliance and control.
Why organizations trust Elastx
Digital Sovereignty
Swedish jurisdiction and free from the U.S. CLOUD Act.
Data Stays in Sweden
Data is stored and managed in Sweden.
Certified Security
ISO 27001, ISO 27017, ISO 27018 and ISO 14001 certified.
High Availability
Built with redundancy, continuous monitoring and expert support around the clock.
No Vendor Lock-In
Open standards and full control over your data.
How do you harden the systems?Vulnerability management & patchingNIS2
We harden physical and logical components (for example servers, virtual machines and service protocols) according to established hardening standards (including CIS Benchmarks), and the configuration is managed as code so that a secure baseline is maintained.
How do I report a vulnerability to you?Vulnerability management & patchingNIS2
We have an established process for responsible vulnerability disclosure. If you or a security researcher discovers a vulnerability, it can be reported confidentially to compliance@elastx.se. We receive, assess and remediate reported vulnerabilities according to our vulnerability and patch management process.
How do you protect against malicious code?Vulnerability management & patchingNIS2
We have multi-layered protection against malicious code at the hypervisor, orchestration and endpoint levels. All company devices have endpoint-level security monitoring (EDR), and in selected environments intrusion detection continuously monitors container runtimes. The protection is combined with recurring security training and awareness among staff.
How do you keep different customers' environments separate?Network & isolationNIS2
We separate different customers' environments (tenants) logically using, among other things, VLAN, VXLAN and software-defined networking (SDN), and the platform's administration layer is kept strictly isolated from customers' runtime environments. The logical segmentation prevents lateral movement and keeps customer workloads separate.
How do you protect against DDoS and network attacks?Network & isolationNIS2
DDoS protection at the network level (L3/L4) against volumetric attacks is included in the platform service at no extra cost, is always active and requires no configuration. In addition, we offer a web application firewall (WAF) and threat intelligence as options, together with secure network zoning that blocks known malicious sources. We also offer a CDN service that can offload and protect web traffic.
Is data encrypted at rest?Data protection & encryptionNIS2GDPR
Yes. We have a policy and procedures for encryption, and all disks in our environment are encrypted with strong encryption (AES-256). Physical servers use self-encrypting drives (SED) according to TCG Opal with pre-boot authentication, so that a physically stolen storage medium does not grant access to data.
How is data protected in transit?Data protection & encryptionNIS2GDPR
Data in transit is protected with TLS (versions 1.2 and 1.3) using strong encryption (AES-256) and with SSH key pairs. For managed database services, CA certificates are provided so that you can verify and encrypt your client connections.
How are encryption keys managed?Data protection & encryptionNIS2GDPR
The encryption keys are protected by pre-boot authentication with a unique key per server, derived from the server's unique hardware, and are unlocked only at startup.
How do you develop secure software?Secure developmentNIS2
Our in-house development follows a secure development procedure. Security requirements are defined early, code undergoes mandatory peer review and automatic static security analysis (SAST) of container images, and no secrets or keys are stored in source code. The source code resides in access-controlled repositories with MFA, where permissions are governed by developer role and branch protection is applied. Build and deployment pipelines are automated, and changes are tested in isolated test environments before they reach production. No real customer data or personal data is used in development or test environments.
How do you handle incidents?Incident managementNIS2
We deliver services around the clock and therefore have troubleshooting and incident handling around the clock, year-round, with continuous monitoring of the platform and alarm reception. When an event is identified it is classified and prioritised based on severity and impact on the services, and it is escalated according to defined procedures to the right technical expertise. A serious problem can be escalated to a critical incident, which activates a dedicated crisis management team with a mandate to make rapid decisions. After a remediated incident, a root cause analysis is carried out to capture permanent improvements in the platform and our working methods.
How quickly do you inform us of an incident or personal data breach?Incident managementNIS2GDPRDORA
In the event of an incident affecting you, we inform you without undue delay, and at the latest within 24 hours of becoming aware, so that you have time to meet your own obligations. In the event of a significant incident, we follow Cybersäkerhetslagen (NIS2) in reporting to the competent authority (MCF): early warning within 24 hours, an incident report within 72 hours and a final report no later than one month after the incident report.
How do you report material events to authorities?Incident managementNIS2GDPRDORA
Material events are reported according to applicable rules. Serious incidents covered by Cybersäkerhetslagen (NIS2) are reported to Myndigheten för Civilt Försvar (MCF), and for incidents concerning financial entities we deliver to, we follow DORA. In the event of a personal data breach, we as a data processor inform the affected data controller without undue delay under GDPR, so that they can fulfil their own notification obligation.
Do you test your continuity capability?Continuity & recoveryNIS2DORA
Yes. We exercise our continuity plan (Business Continuity Plan, BCP) through recurring, full-scale continuity exercises as part of our ISO/IEC 27001 work. The exercises are typically unannounced for the majority of the organisation in order to give a realistic result, and they test the crisis management team's decision-making, the technical containment procedures and our communication channels under high pressure.
How is the platform built for redundancy and recovery?Continuity & recoveryNIS2DORA
The platform is distributed across three active availability zones in the Stockholm area (STO1, STO2 and STO3), geographically separated so that a physical or environmental disruption in one zone does not take down the service. Services are replicated between the zones for automatic redundancy. For critical backups and logs we offer The Vault - an immutable, ransomware-resistant storage that additionally sits in a separate region around 350 km from the Stockholm area, in a protected underground facility. It is based on Object Lock (WORM - Write Once, Read Many), which means data cannot be changed or deleted during the configured lock period, even if permissions are compromised.
Do you back up our data?Continuity & recoveryNIS2
We back up our own platform, for example configuration and system images, and these backups are created and tested according to a defined backup policy. Backup and any replication of your data is configured and governed by you, with tools in the platform or external tools, based on your wishes and what your contract covers - this gives you full control over what is saved, where and for how long. For immutable storage of critical copies and logs we offer The Vault. Our object storage service stores three copies by default, distributed across three availability zones.
How do you ensure security in your supply chain?Supply chainNIS2
We are part of a supply chain and apply a continuous, documented and risk-based review of our suppliers, in line with the requirements on supply chain security in Cybersäkerhetslagen (NIS2). New suppliers are reviewed and approved before they are taken into use, and our critical and essential suppliers are followed up annually as well as upon noted deviations. A summary or certificate regarding the supplier review can be shared on request.
Can you give concrete examples of how you secure the supply chain?Supply chainNIS2Digital sovereignty
Yes. Our fiber infrastructure is provided in part via Stokab, which is covered by the City of Stockholm's central guidelines and monitored operationally by CERT Stockholm. Our CDN is delivered by Varnish Software as a fully European service with a control plane in France, isolated from foreign legislation such as the CLOUD Act. Throughout, we prioritise suppliers within the EU/EEA and services that are not exposed to foreign jurisdiction.
How do you assess new suppliers before engaging them?Supply chainNIS2
We apply a structured framework for supplier risk assessment in two steps. In the first step we assess the supplier as a whole - security maturity (for example ISO/IEC 27001 certification or an ISAE 3000 report), financial stability and how they in turn manage their own subcontractors. The outcome is approved, escalation for deeper review or a stop. In the second step we assess the specific service's risk according to a likelihood and impact model (ISO 31000), taking into account data protection, availability and business impact. The assessment is carried out and documented before a supplier is taken into use, and critical suppliers are approved by management.
Do you place security requirements on your suppliers in contracts?Supply chainNIS2
Yes. We place security requirements on suppliers in contracts, and the requirements are tightened in step with the risk the service entails, for example requirements on encryption, redundancy and contingency plans. We also require suppliers to have control of their own supply chain and to keep their staff trained in accordance with NIS2. The framework also contains binding rules for data transfer that govern which data may be stored where, regardless of what the other parts of the assessment show.
Do you take into account where data is stored and which jurisdiction applies?Supply chainNIS2GDPR
Yes. When we assess and select suppliers, we take into account where data is stored physically and which jurisdiction the supplier is subject to, including exposure to foreign legislation such as the CLOUD Act. Where relevant, we prioritise storage within the EU/EEA and suppliers that offer European data sovereignty.