Monday, March 02, 2026

MY OWN VIEWS ABOUT DATA SOVEREIGNTY

MY OWN VIEWS ABOUT DATA SOVEREIGNTY

We keep hearing about “data privacy” and “cybersecurity” as if they were separate issues floating in a digital vacuum. But in truth, they all converge into one deeper concept: data sovereignty. And if we don’t reckon with that, I fear our efforts at privacy and security will remain half-baked.

What exactly is data sovereignty? At its core, it is the principle that data is subject to the laws and governance of the country or region where it is collected or stored. It means a citizen’s data should not drift off into foreign jurisdictions where local laws don’t apply. It means that when we talk about controlling our digital assets, we aren’t just talking about locking a database—we’re talking about maintaining legal, technical and ethical oversight over our data.

In the Philippine context, we do not yet have a dedicated data sovereignty law—but the topic is increasingly shaping digital-policy debates and legislative proposals. For example, industry groups are pushing for such a law, noting that our neighbors in ASEAN already have stronger localization or governance regimes. Meanwhile, we rely primarily on the Data Privacy Act of 2012 (RA 10173), which protects personal information, and the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012 (RA 10175), which targets illegal access and interference. But neither fully addresses the question: who controls the data and where is it stored?

In my own opinion, there is a direct connection between data privacy → data security → data sovereignty. Let me unpack this:

  • Without data security, all the encryption, access controls and firewalls in the world won’t help if data is simply mishandled, mis-used or exposed.

  • Without data sovereignty, even secure data may be subject to foreign jurisdiction, foreign laws or hidden access from abroad—not just because of malicious actors, but by design of global cloud platforms.

  • And without data privacy, the individual loses control over how their personal or community data is processed, shared or monetized.

So the bottom line: If our law wants to keep up with technological advances that directly bear on these issues, then we must treat data sovereignty as core—not optional.


Why does data sovereignty matter?

  1. Legal jurisdiction and control – If the servers holding our data are abroad, whose law applies? Which court has jurisdiction? If something goes wrong, will Filipinos have real recourse?

  2. National security and economic independence – Data about citizens, infrastructure or business operations are strategic assets. Countries such as Indonesia, Vietnam or Thailand already have data localization or sovereignty policies to attract investment and protect their data economy.

  3. Technological sovereignty – The launch of the first Philippine “sovereign cloud” by ePLDT is a step in that direction: hosting government applications and data strictly within the country and under local regulation.

  4. Community, cultural and indigenous data rights – Data isn’t just financial or personal—it includes community histories, indigenous knowledge, local languages. Sovereignty over that data matters hugely for cultural justice.


Where do we stand, and what is holding us back?

We are stuck in a curious limbo. On the one hand, the government has issued the National Cybersecurity Plan 2023‑2028 through Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) and adopted via Executive Order 58.  On the other hand, the legislative framework that deals directly with data sovereignty is absent. According to industry sources, the lack of a formal law means we may miss out on billions of dollars of data-center investments or digital infrastructure growth. 

The proposed Konektadong Pinoy Act offers an example. While it aims to expand connectivity and digital infrastructure, critics warn that without embedded safeguards for data sovereignty, it could actually open the door to foreign surveillance or data harvesting. 

Another point: technical infrastructure matters. Sure, a law can require “data must stay in the Philippines,” but if we don’t have sufficient data centers, reliable power, cooling, network redundancy and local cloud-capacity, that law may become a barrier rather than a safeguard. The debate over data localization often puts innovation and foreign investment on one side, and national data control on the other. 


My suggestions

  1. Enact a dedicated Data Sovereignty Law – We should not let this drag on. The legislative gap is already recognized by the industry.

  2. Embed periodic review and standards – The law should require review every 5-10 years, to keep pace with AI, cloud tech, data flows and emerging threats.

  3. Balance localization with openness – The law can require critical or sensitive data to reside locally, but not impose blanket restrictions that hamper SMEs or startups. Smart regulation is better than blunt mandates.

  4. Build the infrastructure – We must ensure local data centers, sovereign cloud capacity, encryption-key management, and strong governance frameworks are operational.

  5. Raise public awareness – Citizens need to understand that their data is not just “some server somewhere”—it is part of their rights, their economy and their nation’s sovereignty.


Questions we need to ask

  • Should we treat data generated by government services, national infrastructure or citizens differently from other data?

  • How do we classify “sensitive data” for localization or sovereignty purposes?

  • What roles will LGUs, barangays, indigenous communities play in the governance of their local data?

  • How do we ensure our laws are consistent with international data-flow agreements, cloud industry needs and competitiveness?

  • Can data sovereignty become an enabler of investment—instead of a deterrent—if we get the policy design right?


In closing: Data privacy and data security matter—but they cannot fully deliver unless the framework of data sovereignty is firmly in place. Not just as a conceptual ideal, but as a law, as regulation, as practice. The digital age is not a future possibility—it is our present reality. We owe it to ourselves and to future generations to ensure that when people talk about “data about us,” we know who controls it, where it’s stored, and how it’s governed. Otherwise, we remain digital spectators, not digital masters.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/03-03-2026


Sunday, March 01, 2026

BUILDING CODES AND EARTHQUAKE SHOCKS

 BUILDING CODES AND EARTHQUAKE SHOCKS

It took recent tremors all over the country to remind us again of an uncomfortable truth — our National Building Code of the Philippines (PD 1096) was passed way back in 1977 and has not been substantially updated since. That was almost fifty years ago. In the meantime, both the planet and our country have changed drastically. Earthquakes have grown more destructive, storms have become stronger, and our buildings have grown taller. The question is: has our building code kept pace?

I don’t think so.

When Presidential Decree 1096 was enacted during the time of President Ferdinand Marcos Sr., it was an important milestone. It standardized how we built our homes, schools, and offices. But like any structure that is not maintained, it has now become outdated and brittle. Technology has advanced by leaps and bounds. We now have satellite monitoring, artificial intelligence for ground movement analysis, and sensors that can detect tremors seconds before they hit. Yet our building code still lives in the analog age.

To be fair, its companion manual — the National Structural Code of the Philippines (NSCP) — gets updated every five years. Engineers rely on it to calculate loads and stresses for modern buildings. But the mother code itself, the NBCP, remains stuck in 1977. Shouldn’t we, at the very least, revise it every decade, just as we update our economic plans and census data?

When was it last updated?

The official timeline tells a story of inaction. PD 1096 was passed in 1977. There were some technical adjustments between 2005 and 2020 in the NSCP, mostly about wind speeds and structural loads. The House of Representatives approved a new Philippine Building Act (House Bill 8500) in 2023, and this year the Senate filed its own version (Senate Bill 277). But as of October 2025, the measure still sits in committee. How long do we have to wait — for another magnitude 7 quake perhaps — before we make it a priority?

Earthquake science has moved on

Modern seismology now gives us the power to model what will happen if the “Big One” strikes the Marikina Valley Fault or if a deep tremor hits Surigao again. We cannot predict the exact date and time, but we can simulate the probable damage and use that data to craft stronger design standards. Japan and California have done this for decades. The technology is available; the question is whether we are willing to integrate it into law.

Agencies like PHIVOLCS maintain a comprehensive earthquake database and even publish interactive maps online. JICA (Japan International Cooperation Agency) has been helping us update seismic hazard maps and assess old bridges and public buildings. Yet we seem slow to institutionalize what we learn. Have we made good use of JICA’s studies, or are they just sitting in filing cabinets?

Corruption undermines safety

Even the best codes will fail if the people who implement them are corrupt. Many of our public infrastructure projects have been criticized for being substandard, a word that has almost become synonymous with “government-built.” If contractors are cutting corners, then a new building code will only be as good as the officials who enforce it. Perhaps the new law should include stiffer penalties for structural negligence and graft, especially for public works engineers and contractors. Lives depend on their integrity.

It’s not just about earthquakes

When PD 1096 was written, climate change was not yet a household term. But now, we must also design for super typhoons and floods that are far more intense than those of the 1970s. A modern code should require flood-resilient architecture — elevated foundations, permeable pavements, proper drainage, and green building materials that can survive both heat and humidity.

What the new code should contain

Experts propose that the revised law include mandatory site-specific hazard assessments before construction. This means that if you build near a fault line, your structure must meet stricter standards. Old buildings should also be retrofitted — not just schools and hospitals, but also government offices and bridges that have long exceeded their design life.

It’s encouraging that engineers now use base isolation systems, shear-wall reinforcements, and column jacketing to strengthen older buildings. But without a legal mandate, these technologies will remain optional, and optional safety is dangerous.

The revision should also integrate digital permitting systems, IoT-based monitoring, and open-access geohazard maps so that compliance can be tracked in real time. We already have the technology. What we need is political will.

Lessons from abroad

In Japan, the 1995 Kobe earthquake was a turning point. It exposed the weaknesses of their then-current code, prompting major reforms that saved thousands of lives in subsequent quakes. In Turkey, the 2023 disaster revealed what happens when lax enforcement meets poor construction. The Philippines sits squarely on the Pacific Ring of Fire; we cannot afford to learn the same lesson the hard way.

A call for sustained review

Perhaps the new code should contain a built-in provision requiring mandatory review every ten years, led by PHIVOLCS, DPWH, and the professional engineering associations. That way, the law itself evolves with science. Buildings are not static; neither should our laws be.

The bigger picture

Ultimately, resilience is not just about concrete and steel — it’s about governance and foresight. A resilient nation anticipates danger before it strikes. We should stop reacting to disasters and start designing against them. Every life lost in a collapsed building is a policy failure written in rubble.

So, will it take another deadly quake for us to realize that the 1977 code belongs to the archives, not the future? My hope is that when the Senate finally debates the new building act, it will not just be about updating a decree — it will be about building a safer, smarter Philippines that learns from its own fault lines.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/03-02-2026


Saturday, February 28, 2026

LOCAL PROCUREMENT FOR FOREIGN FASTFOOD CHAINS

LOCAL PROCUREMENT FOR FOREIGN FASTFOOD CHAINS

It was one of my former professors who once told me that the role of a writer is to see things that other people do not see. I can’t recall now whether it was Amelia Bonifacio or Doreen Fernandez, both of whom shaped the way I look at ordinary things and find meaning in them. One of them said that if I could only see what everyone else already sees, then I’m not doing my job as a writer.

Recently, I remembered that bit of wisdom when I noticed something seemingly small — even trivial — yet revealing of something much bigger.

It happened when I bought a burger meal from Burger King. As I opened the paper bag, I noticed the sachet of ketchup that came with it. Out of curiosity, I read the fine print. It said: Made in China.

Now, some might shrug that off as unimportant. But to me, it was an eye-opener.

Why is ketchup for burgers sold in the Philippines being imported from China, when we have tomato and banana ketchup manufacturers right here — some of whom are even exporting their products abroad? Surely, ketchup manufacturing isn’t rocket science. So why are our own local producers missing out on supplying something as simple as ketchup to foreign fast-food chains operating on our soil?

SMALL DETAILS, BIG IMPLICATIONS

This little sachet of ketchup tells a much larger story about missed opportunities in our economy. Every imported ketchup packet represents income that could have gone to Filipino tomato or banana farmers, Filipino packaging suppliers, and Filipino workers in local factories.

If we multiply that by the millions of burgers sold across all foreign fast-food outlets in the Philippines every day, that’s a staggering amount of economic leakage — value that could have stayed within our borders.

NO LAW, JUST COMMON SENSE

As of today, there are no laws that require foreign fast-food franchises to source their supplies locally. The Government Procurement Law (RA 9184) does prioritize Filipino suppliers, but that only applies to public contracts, not private corporations.

However, this is not about imposing new rules or being heavy-handed. We don’t have to make it mandatory. What we can do is create incentives — tax perks, recognition programs, or even expedited import clearances for companies that commit to local sourcing.

Let’s not threaten them with penalties; let’s persuade them with the economic and branding advantages of supporting Filipino producers.

THE ECONOMIC CASE FOR LOCAL SOURCING

There are many practical reasons why sourcing locally makes sense even from a business standpoint.

For one, it avoids import tariffs, freight costs, and shipping delays. It also makes the supply chain more resilient and adaptable to local market changes. Using local ingredients allows franchises to tweak their flavors to Filipino tastes — just as many already use banana ketchup or calamansi as part of their menu offerings.

There’s also the public relations angle. Imagine the goodwill a global brand could earn by proudly announcing, “Now made with locally sourced ketchup from Filipino farmers.” That kind of message resonates with customers who are increasingly conscious of sustainability and community support.

GOOD EXAMPLES TO FOLLOW

Some companies are already doing this. McDonald’s Philippines, for instance, sources its rice, chicken, and some condiments from local producers. Meanwhile, Jollibee, though Filipino-owned, has shown that integrating local supply chains is possible even when expanding globally.

Even within foreign franchises, there’s often flexibility. Many franchise agreements allow local operators to choose suppliers, as long as the products meet quality standards. That means there’s room to negotiate — room for local ketchup, local packaging, local vegetables, and more.

WHY NOT A LOCAL PROCUREMENT POLICY?

The government, through the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) or the Board of Investments (BOI), could develop a Local Procurement Incentive Program — a framework that rewards foreign franchises for sourcing locally.

Such a program could include:

  • Tax incentives for using locally manufactured food inputs and packaging.

  • Recognition or awards for companies that achieve high local sourcing ratios.

  • Public-private dialogues where food manufacturers, farmers, and franchises can co-create sustainable supply agreements.

Even local government units (LGUs) could help by linking local farmers’ cooperatives to nearby fast-food chains. If a city can supply its own tomatoes, onions, lettuce, or packaging materials, why import from thousands of miles away?

A MATTER OF NATIONAL INTEREST

We should look at this ketchup issue not just as a trade concern but as a development opportunity. Every sachet, every paper cup, every burger wrapper could represent a small piece of local livelihood — if only we cared enough to make it so.

I am not suggesting that we should ban imported supplies. Rather, I am suggesting that we open the door for Filipino producers to become part of the global supply chain — starting with the foreign brands that are already operating here and earning from our market.

MY SUGGESTION

Instead of letting ketchup money flow out of the country, let’s keep it circulating here — from farm to factory to franchise. Instead of helping tomato farmers in China, let’s help those in Ilocos, Bukidnon, or Mindoro.

We may be talking about something as small as a ketchup sachet, but small things add up. And sometimes, it’s in the smallest details that we find the biggest opportunities for national progress.

If we can see that — as my professors taught me long ago — then perhaps we are finally looking at our economy with open eyes.

Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres

iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/03-01-2026


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