- Open administration
The AOC initiates a pilot of inclusive support in the digital environment
At the regulatory level, 2009 was the year of the regulatory development of the Law 11/2007, of 22 June, on electronic access of citizens to public services. Following this trend, in early January 2010 the Council of Ministers approved two Royal Decrees which partially develop the law and which seek to establish the common bases for all public administrations when Articles 41 and 42 of the law are applied and which in particular are aimed at ensuring the interoperability of information systems (and non-discrimination of the citizen by reason of his technological choice), and the security, standardization and preservation of information, respectively.
In other words, these Royal Decrees:
they feel the basis for generating interoperability and trust in the use of electronic means that allow the exercise of rights and the fulfillment of duties through these means.
they establish the minimum requirements that each Administration will have to apply to offer the citizen a unified service. In other words, a citizen will be able to carry out a management without having to know the competent administration.
THE Royal Decree 4/2010 (PDF; 222KB) is the set of technological criteria and recommendations for the preservation and standardization of information, as well as the formats and applications that administrations must take into account when making decisions that affect the interoperability of systems. It establishes the necessary conditions to ensure an adequate level of technological interaction between administrations.
In addition, it addresses issues essential to the advancement of e-government such as the dimensions of interoperability, inter-administrative communications, technology reuse and transfer, interoperability in e-signature policy, document retrieval and preservation. electronic and the permanent update of the Scheme itself.
For its part, the Royal Decree 3/2010, (PDF; 479) sets out the security policy for the use of electronic media. It establishes the basic principles and minimum requirements that allow adequate protection of information through measures to ensure the security of systems, data, communications and electronic services.
It also pays special attention to the protection of the information handled and the services provided, in a proportionate way through the categorization of information systems, and to the security of electronic communications and the need to carry out security audits. periodicals at least every two years. On the other hand, it defines the methodology for dealing with the response to security incidents, and the important role played by the National Cryptological Center, either as a writer of security guides for the Administration, or as a protagonist. main in the articulation of responses to incidents affecting security.