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RVU is a 100% state-owned digital stronghold designed to protect national information from regional instability and infrastructure failures. By maintaining a high-performance, post-quantum encrypted backup in a neutral overseas location, the State ensures that its core archives—from land titles to the national ledger—remain inviolable and retrievable even if local networks are compromised.
Maintaining an encrypted backup in a remote, sovereign-controlled environment is the only way to ensure the survival of national data in the face of localized catastrophic failure or targeted cyber-warfare. By separating the primary data from the backup via a secure, encrypted tunnel to Almaty, the State creates a "digital safe harbor" that remains unaffected by regional disruptions, natural disasters, or the "weaponization" of local infrastructure. This geographical and cryptographic distance ensures that even if the primary systems in Port Vila are compromised or physically destroyed, the nation's core identity, land records, and administrative memory remain intact and retrievable.
Reliability in this project is defined by the guaranteed uptime and the immediate accessibility of data whenever it is needed. Storing encrypted backups in a specialized, 100% state-managed facility ensures that the performance of national systems is never subject to the whims of third-party cloud providers or foreign corporate interests. With the integration of post-quantum encryption and dedicated Chinese ARM-based hardware, the reliability of the data’s integrity is secured for decades, not just years. This high-reliability architecture ensures that the state can always trust the accuracy and availability of its records, providing a consistent foundation for national governance and economic stability.
True continuity requires more than just a second copy of data; it requires the elimination of all single points of failure through independent hardware and connectivity paths. This project provides a complete mirrored environment equipped with its own power systems, high-capacity storage, and a satellite-based failover link via the G60 constellation. By having a fully redundant, "live" backup elsewhere, the government can immediately switch operations to the remote node if the primary network is severed. This ensures that essential services—from financial transactions to emergency communications—never experience a total blackout, regardless of the status of regional undersea cables.
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