Swisscom Trust Services - Trust Blog

A digital trust recipe for overcoming bureaucratic hurdles

Written by Mario Voge | 3/24/26 1:07 PM

Across the globe, governments are confronting a common challenge: how to reduce administrative complexity without compromising security, compliance, or public trust. From the United States under Donald Trump to Argentina led by Javier Milei, and Germany's current Grand Coalition, a shared narrative is emerging that bureaucracy must become leaner, faster, and more responsive to citizens and organizations.

While policy ambitions set the direction, real transformation depends on execution. This is where fully integrated and trusted technology becomes indispensable. However, this is not an easy task. Bureaucratic systems have historically evolved to ensure accountability, standardization, and control. These values remain important in the digital age and have become central to digitizing sensitive business processes. It may seem paradoxical at first: While everyone in the digital economy clamors for reduced bureaucracy, a certain level of bureaucracy is needed to provide services in a safe environment.

To achieve a balance between economic freedom, customer satisfaction, legal certainty, and regulatory compliance in the future, nations and supranational organizations must adapt centuries-old administrative systems to the digital age. However, these systems often remain fragmented to this day. Multiple agencies, disconnected databases, redundant verification processes, and paper-based workflows are a legacy that creates friction for citizens, governments, and businesses alike.

 

Efforts to "cut red tape" frequently focus on regulatory reform. Yet without addressing the underlying technical fragmentation and anchoring real digital trust, such efforts risk delivering only incremental improvements.

Integration as the Missing Link

At the heart of modern bureaucracy lies a critical issue: lack of interoperability. Systems that cannot communicate seamlessly create duplication, delays, and opportunities for error. Process integration addresses this by enabling seamless, secure data exchange among agencies, citizens, companies, and technology platforms. Fundamental requirements for this are unified identity verification processes and strong authentication – in short, digital trust.

Integrating processes spanning multiple institutions and involving citizens and businesses is a major undertaking, but it is essential to eliminate mountains of paperwork and make digital administration more efficient. This requires creating interfaces, aligning processes, breaking down data silos, and standardizing systems. While this is a complex task, it is technically feasible. One question that always arises, however, is: Are highly integrated digital processes involving various stakeholders and interfaces also secure? This is precisely where digital trust comes into play.

Bureaucracy within the Internet of Trust

Is excessive bureaucracy a symptom of a lack of trust? Given some of the processes we encounter in everyday life or in government administration, one could certainly argue that it is. For example, in the case of driver's licenses, the police should not simply accept anyone's claim to have one without documentary proof. Similarly, citizens who want to drive abroad must apply for an international driving permit if their home country's license is not recognized there. While this naturally creates bureaucracy, it is also understandable that local officials, who are not as familiar with foreign documents, want to verify their authenticity. A similar situation arises at the tax office, where proof of submitted expenses is requested and, in cases of doubt, verified with other agencies. Another example could be found in the education sector, where universities may need to verify credentials from other educational institutions. There are countless other examples that create new bureaucratic hurdles. Digitization has not made this problem much easier so far. Without special security mechanisms, digital documents can even be forged more easily than analogue documents.

But what if we could implement a universal anchor of trust across all digital processes? This would significantly reduce bureaucracy and be a real game-changer. Yes, this is an ambitious vision, but precisely what Swisscom is aiming for with its "Internet of Trust" approach – an ecosystem where identities are protected, information is verified, and transactions are safe for all parties, always and beyond any doubt.

The technical foundations of trust

A core pillar of any streamlined administrative system is the ability to reliably identify individuals and organizations. Electronic identification (eID) solutions provide a secure, standardized way to verify identities across services.

When implemented as part of an integrated ecosystem, eID enables:

  • Single sign-on experiences for multiple public services

     

  • Reduced onboarding times for citizens and businesses

     

  • Enhanced security and compliance with regulatory frameworks

By eliminating the need for repeated identity checks, governments can dramatically reduce administrative burden while improving user experience.

Closely linked to digital identity is the adoption of electronic signatures and seals. Traditional approval processes—often dependent on physical documents—are a major source of delay.

  • Instant document execution regardless of location

     

  • Automated workflows with built-in validation and audit trails

     

  • Legal certainty aligned with international standards

Integrated eSignature solutions allow:

All this is backed by strong cryptography relying on mathematical complexity to protect the ecosystem's integrity. Are you interested in learning more about electronic signatures, their different level and potential to reduce friction in the digital economy?