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
Customer data is stored in Swedish data centers.
Certified Security
ISO 27001, ISO 27017, ISO 27018 and ISO 14001 certified, with regular independent audits.
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.
What does your exit strategy look like if we want to leave?Digital sovereignty & independenceDORADigital sovereignty
The goal is that you should never feel locked in. We build on open standards and open source (including OpenStack and Kubernetes), which means you can move your applications and data to another environment. You can export your data ahead of a termination, and we apply no mandatory lock-in periods, in line with the EU Data Act.
ICT risk managementRegulatory complianceDORA
We ensure and maintain an adequate level of digital operational resilience, and risks within information and communication technology (ICT) are managed within our risk management process.
How do you report serious ICT incidents?Regulatory complianceNIS2DORA
We have a documented, communicated and tested process for reporting serious ICT incidents and cyber threats to customers and competent authorities. Reporting follows applicable rules, including Cybersäkerhetslagen (which implements NIS2) and, for incidents affecting financial entities we deliver to, DORA. For a significant incident we apply the NIS2 model: early warning within 24 hours, an incident report within 72 hours and a final report no later than one month thereafter.
Testing of digital operational resilienceRegulatory complianceDORA
We carry out recurring tests of our resilience. Penetration tests are performed by an independent external party, while continuity exercises are conducted internally. Tests are documented and followed by a plan for remediation and upcoming tests.
How do you share information about threats and vulnerabilities?Regulatory complianceDORA
We continuously monitor and identify cyber threats and vulnerabilities via established sources and have a procedure for sharing relevant threat information, both internally and with affected customers and collaboration partners where appropriate. The aim is to be able to act quickly on new threats and to contribute to stronger shared resilience.
Management of ICT third-party riskRegulatory complianceDORA
Appropriate controls are applied at procurement and on an ongoing basis throughout the contract term to reduce risks linked to critical subcontractors.
Exit strategy and migration planRegulatory complianceDORA
Contracts with critical subcontractors contain exit clauses and a documented process that secures continued delivery during a migration. We validate that the process works through recurring reviews and scenario-based tests of the exit and migration plan, so that it can be carried out in practice if a supplier needs to be replaced.
How do you avoid vendor lock-in?Data protection & encryptionDORADigital sovereignty
We build on open standards and open source (including OpenStack and Kubernetes) so that you can move your applications if you want. We apply no mandatory lock-in periods, and you pay for the resources you allocate. As a Swedish company we operate under Swedish and European jurisdiction and are not subject to third-country legislation, and we comply with the EU Data Act to counteract lock-in effects.
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.