Eco - Association of the Internet Industry

eco – Verband der Internetwirtschaft e.V (transl. Association of the Internet industry) is the German Internet trade association and advocacy group.

eco – Verband der Internetwirtschaft
eco – Verband der Internetwirtschaft e.V
Abbreviationeco
Formation26 June 1995
Typetrade association, advocacy group
Legal statusregistered association;[1]
Registered lobbyist with the Bundestag[2] and European Commission[3]
Purposerepresenting the interests of its members
HeadquartersLichtstrasse 43h
Location
Region served
Germany, Europe
Membership
c. 1,100 companies (2021)
Chief executive
(German: Vorstands-Vorsitzender)
Oliver J. Süme
Main organ
Board of directors (German: Präsidium)
SubsidiariesDE-CIX
Staffc. 70 (2021)
Websiteinternational.eco.de

The association defines itself as a special interest group (German: "Interessenvertretung") of Internet oriented businesses, and has the goal of promoting technologies, shaping framework conditions and representing the interests of its members towards policy makers and in national and international committees. With more than 1,100 member companies across 70 countries, eco is the largest Internet industry association in Europe, as of 2021.[4]

eco is focused principally on the German Internet industry, and since 1997 has been active in lobbying for Internet legislation, establishing legal precedents on Internet-related issues, and operating the DE-CIX Internet exchange points, which are among the largest in the world.[5]

History

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Founded on June 26, 1995 in Bonn,[6] the name "eco" was chosen as an abbreviation of "electronic commerce." Its first task was the organisation and management of DE-CIX, which it undertook in the same year. eco's political work began in 1997 when it assisted in the formulation of the Information and Telecommunication Services Act [de].

DE-CIX

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eco is the organizational parent of DE-CIX, the "German Commercial Internet Exchanges"). The first and largest of the DE-CIX exchanges is the one which eco established in Frankfurt in 1995. As of 2022, DE-CIX Frankfurt is the largest Internet exchange in the world by volume of bandwidth, producing an average of 7 terabits per second, and third-largest by number of participating networks, after Sao Paulo and Jakarta.[5] And As of 2022, DE-CIX maintains 29 IXPs throughout Europe, Asia, and North America.

Political lobbying

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The group is registered as a political lobbying group by the German Bundestag[2] and the transparency register of the European Commission and Parliament.[3] The European transparency register states the amount of eco's influencing work that focuses on EU policy makers was equivalent to the work of two full-time lobbyists[a] in 2019, for which eco paid between €50,000 and €99,999.[3]

Anti-spam congresses

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eco has hosted annual German Anti-Spam Congresses since 2003, which have been integrated into the German "Internet Security Days" since 2011.

Cloud computing

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The establishment of EuroCloud Deutschland_eco e. V. took place in 2009. EuroCloud Germany_eco e. V. is an association of the cloud computing industry in Germany and part of the European EuroCloud network with the StarAudit.

Cyber defense

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The Advanced Cyber Defense Center (ACDC) is a center in which 28 partners from 14 European countries, coordinated by eco and funded by the European Union, jointly improve the security of networks and systems against botnets and malware. It opened in 2013.[7] Another eco office was opened in Brussels in 2016. The center operates five principle projects:[8]

  • A centralized clearing house, acting as a single point of contact for data storage and analysis.
  • A support center, delivering structured information to stakeholders and affected end users
  • An analytic function focusing on the detection and mitigation of infected websites.
  • An analytic function focusing on the detection of botnets and network anomalies
  • The development of tools for identification and removal of malware from end user devices.

Awards

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eco annually presents the eco Internet Awards to companies which have made important contributions to the German Internet industry,[9] and publishes numerous white-papers and industry reports.[10]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ one full-time and four ¼-time lobbyists

References

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  1. ^ Amtsgericht Köln 2004.
  2. ^ a b Bundestag 2021.
  3. ^ a b c European Commission 2021.
  4. ^ eco 2021.
  5. ^ a b Packet Clearing House 2021.
  6. ^ Amtsgericht Bonn 1995.
  7. ^ van Eeten, Michel. "Advanced Cyber Defense Center: Europe takes on the battle against botnets". Technical University of Delft. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  8. ^ Ivanov, Ivo. "Projects: ACDC: Advanced Cyber Defence Centre". Europe's Information Society: Thematic Portal. European Commission. Archived from the original on 6 February 2013. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  9. ^ Krischenowski 2007.
  10. ^ Edwards 2020.

Sources

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