place

Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence

2008 establishments in EstoniaAllied Command TransformationBuildings and structures in TallinnComputer security organizationsInformation technology in Estonia
Information technology organizations based in EuropeMilitary installations of EstoniaOrganizations based in TallinnOrganizations established in 2008

NATO CCD COE, officially the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence (Estonian: K5 or NATO küberkaitsekoostöö keskus), is one of NATO Centres of Excellence, located in Tallinn, Estonia. The centre was established on 14 May 2008, it received full accreditation by NATO and attained the status of International Military Organisation on 28 October 2008. NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence is an International Military Organisation with a mission to enhance the capability, cooperation and information sharing among NATO, its member nations and partners in cyber defence by virtue of education, research and development, lessons learned and consultation.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence
Filtri tee, Tallinn Kesklinna linnaosa

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of ExcellenceContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 59.423247222222 ° E 24.767572222222 °
placeShow on map

Address

Filtri sõjaväelinnak

Filtri tee
15007 Tallinn, Kesklinna linnaosa
Estonia
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Bronze Soldier of Tallinn
Bronze Soldier of Tallinn

The Bronze Soldier (Estonian: Pronkssõdur, Russian: Бронзовый Солдат, Bronzovyj Soldat) is the informal name of a controversial Soviet World War II war memorial in Tallinn, Estonia, built at the site of several war graves, which were relocated to the nearby Tallinn Military Cemetery in 2007. It was originally named "Monument to the Liberators of Tallinn" (Estonian: Tallinna vabastajate monument, Russian: Монумент освободителям Таллина, Monument osvoboditeljam Tallina), was later titled to its current official name "Monument to the Fallen in the Second World War", and is sometimes called Alyosha, or Tõnismäe monument after its old location. The memorial was unveiled on 22 September 1947, three years after the Red Army reached Tallinn on 22 September 1944 during World War II. The monument consists of a stonewall structure made of dolomite and a two metre (6.5 ft) bronze statue of a soldier in a World War II-era Red Army military uniform. It was originally located in a small park (during the Soviet years called the Liberators' Square) on Tõnismägi in central Tallinn, above a small burial site of Soviet soldiers' remains, reburied in April 1945. In April 2007, the Estonian government relocated the Bronze Soldier and, after their exhumation and identification, the remains of the Soviet soldiers, to the Defence Forces Cemetery of Tallinn. Not all remains were reburied there, as relatives were given a chance to claim them, and several bodies were reburied in various locations in the former Soviet Union according to the wishes of the relatives. Political differences over the interpretation of the events of the war symbolised by the monument had already led to a controversy between Estonia's community of polyethnic Russophone post-World War II immigrants and Estonians, as well as between Russia and Estonia. The disputes surrounding the relocation peaked with two nights of riots in Tallinn (known as the Bronze Night), besieging of the Estonian embassy in Moscow for a week, and cyberattacks on Estonian organizations. The events caught international attention and led to a multitude of political reactions.