Tallinn University of Technology

TalTech

Internationally successful university Tallinn University of Technology (TALTECH), the only technological university in Estonia, is the flagship of Estonian engineering and technology education. Here the synergy between different fields (technological, natural, exact, economic and health sciences) is created and new ideas are born. TALTECH is to become one of the leading technological universities in the Baltic Sea region. High-quality programs and successful alumni Study and teaching is based on internationally recognized research and the graduates are highly rated on the labour market. The University’s approximately 70,000 alumni have shaped the economic landscape of present-day Estonia. Excellence in research and innovation TALTECH is a university, which by relying on academic competencies and professional management, responds actively to the needs of the rapidly developing society and is involved in tackling the challenges of the digital era.

Lobbying Activity

Meeting with Roxana Mînzatu (Executive Vice-President) and

23 Oct 2025 · Meeting to visit the premises of Taltech including showcase robotics laboratory and meet PhD students; Overview of AI-Leap initiative, integrating AI in education

Response to European Digital Identity (EUid)

2 Sept 2020

Thank you for the possibility to contribute in the eIDAS review process. TalTech Information Systems Group has researched and observed the developments of eIDAS for several years. During this period, we have focused on eIDAS implementation practices, analysis of different countries and cross-border use of the eIDAS regulation. Based on our experience and research findings, eIDAS is a valuable concept that definitely strengthens the EU digital single market. Main challenges come from different practices or interpretation. By combining option 1 and option 2, it is possible to significantly improve the current situation and make eIDAS more unambiguous and transparent. According to the provided documentation, option 3 would result into setting up a parallel scheme to the already existing eID schemes. Therefore, this option adds complexity to the eIDAS ecosystem and presumes additional funding. Therefore, we recommend to conduct a cost-benefit analysis regarding this option, in particular, because of the use of the EUid is planned to be voluntary.
Read full response

Meeting with Juhan Lepassaar (Cabinet of Vice-President Andrus Ansip)

30 Jun 2017 · e-Governance