2026-07-09 –, Idea Stage
A live demo and opportunity to experience our Sovereignty Anchor. These physically sealed server nodes can practically be deployed anywhere and still be secure. With confidential computing by design, they allow distributed computing while providing full control of data and functions to their owners.
Our Sovereignty Anchor is a prototype of future modular “IT packs” from which infrastructure in both data centers and distributed edge structures will be built in the future – highly secure, transparently verifiable, industrially manufactured, and installable and replaceable without in-depth technical knowledge. It combines technical innovations like a perimeter seal, advanced confidential computing control software and distributed secure execution domains (SGX). We will run a live demo and everyone at DWeb Camp can take the opportunity to experience the system first hand. At its core are physically sealed server nodes which practically can be deployed anywhere and still be secure. With confidential computing by design, they allow distributed computing while providing full control of data and functions to their owners.
Digital identity becomes valuable when it works across systems and enables real processes. That’s where Dr. Andre Kudra focuses his work. For more than 20 years, he has been working at the intersection of business and technology, bringing verifiable credentials and wallets into existing architectures and using them to build new, trusted digital processes across organizations. Business-driven yet tech-savvy, he combines strategic thinking with a deep understanding of how systems behave in practice.
As CIO of esatus AG, he shapes the technological direction together with his team and works on solutions that extend existing IAM landscapes instead of replacing them. He co-founded real-cis GmbH, which is making the vision of a truly Secure Platform happen with its Sovereignty Anchors, hardware and software comined for truly decentralized, sovereign computing.
His roots go back to the early days of digital culture, from the demoscene to retro computing, which still shapes how he thinks about technology today.
