07/09/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/09/2026 15:46
In armed conflict, a simple symbol can save lives. The Red Cross, Red Crescent, and Red Crystal emblems signal that those providing medical care and humanitarian assistance must be protected.
In cyberspace, there is not yet a widely adopted equivalent, even as hospitals, humanitarian organizations, and relief operations increasingly rely on digital systems to deliver care, coordinate assistance, protect sensitive data, and reach people in crisis.
Today, the digital systems that support hospitals and humanitarian operations-including communications tools, logistics platforms, patient care systems, cloud services, and the data center infrastructure which underpins them-can be difficult to distinguish from surrounding digital infrastructure. In conflict, that raises the risk of misidentification, spillover, and cascading disruption from cyber operations. As cybersecurity operations become more automated and machine-driven, clear, trustworthy, machine-readable signals become even more important.
That is why Microsoft supports the International Committee of the Red Cross as it launches the next phase of the Digital Emblem initiative today in Geneva. The Digital Emblem is intended to provide a machine-readable way to help identify digital assets that support protected medical and humanitarian functions, so they can be recognized, verified, and avoided in conflict settings.
From principles to operational practice
The Digital Emblem does not create new legal protections, and it does not replace cybersecurity. Instead, it helps to make existing protections under international humanitarian law more actionable in cyberspace.
For many years, governments, humanitarian actors, civil society, technical experts, and industry have worked to clarify how international law applies in cyberspace. These efforts have reinforced a core principle that civilians, medical services, and humanitarian operations must be respected and protected in armed conflict. But translating that principle into operational reality remains difficult when protected digital assets are not easily identifiable.
The Digital Emblem can help bridge that gap. If implemented responsibly, a clearer, more consistent, and technically usable signal can support recognition, verification, and respect for protected medical and humanitarian functions in cyberspace.
This next phase marks an important transition for the Digital Emblem: from concept development toward operationalization, testing, standards, and implementation.
Over the past several years, the ICRC has worked with states, the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, technical experts, standards bodies, academia, and industry to explore whether the protective function of the physical emblems can be translated meaningfully into cyberspace. That work has helped move the Digital Emblem from an important idea to a project with growing legal, technical, and operational foundations.
The work now is to test how the Digital Emblem can be deployed, discovered, authenticated, and verified in real-world conditions. It also means advancing standards work through bodies such as the Internet Engineering Task Force and the International Telecommunication Union , developing guidance for those who operate protected digital infrastructure, and engaging the actors who will need to recognize and respect the Digital Emblem in practice.
Building on Microsoft's work to protect civilians in cyberspace
Across our cybersecurity work, we have consistently argued that protecting civilians and critical services in cyberspace requires more than statements of principle. It requires practical standards, technical implementation, trusted partnerships, and cooperation among governments, humanitarian actors, civil society, standards bodies, and industry.
From our early calls for stronger norms of responsible state behavior in cyberspace, to the launch of the Cybersecurity Tech Accord , Microsoft has advocated for the application of international law and the protection of civilians online.
Every day, Microsoft works alongside governments and partners to detect, disrupt, and defend against cyberattacks that target critical infrastructure, healthcare, and humanitarian operations. Together, we have seen the importance of real-time visibility, trusted signals, and coordinated defense across public and private actors. This work has underscored a central reality: as civilian and humanitarian services become more digitally dependent, cybersecurity is increasingly connected to humanitarian resilience.
Microsoft will continue supporting the ICRC with a focus on how our technologies enable this model at scale. That includes exploring how technology can support both sides: enabling humanitarian and medical organizations to signal protected systems and helping defenders recognize and verify those signals in real-world operations.
The role of industry
The ICRC's leadership is essential to the credibility and neutrality of this effort. But for the Digital Emblem to succeed, it must also work across the broader technology ecosystem, which includes the cloud services and data centers, telecommunications networks, cybersecurity tools, identity systems, and other digital infrastructure on which humanitarian and medical organizations increasingly rely.
Industry, therefore, has an important role to play in helping ensure the Digital Emblem is technically sound, interoperable, and aligned with how defenders operate in practice. That includes supporting standards development, helping test implementation models, and ensuring that any approach reflects both sides of the model: enabling eligible humanitarian and medical organizations to express the signal for relevant assets and helping defenders recognize and verify that signal in operational workflows.
In today's fragmented and low-trust geopolitical environment, shared technical standards can reduce ambiguity even where political agreement is difficult. That is why standards-based implementation can help make the Digital Emblem consistent, verifiable, and usable across networks, platforms, and borders.
From launch to implementation
The launch in Geneva marks an important milestone, but the Digital Emblem's promise will depend on what happens next.
The work ahead should focus on clear and concrete outcomes: continued technical testing, progress in standards development bodies, practical implementation guidance, and broader engagement from states, humanitarian actors, technology companies, telecommunications providers, cybersecurity professionals, and operational defenders.
The call to action is straightforward. Governments should support the Digital Emblem as a mechanism for making protected humanitarian and medical functions more identifiable in cyberspace and promote respect for it in policy and practice. Humanitarian and medical organizations should help test and shape implementation so it reflects operational reality. Standards bodies should continue building the technical foundations for trusted adoption. And technology companies should help translate the Digital Emblem into the tools, systems, and workflows defenders already use.
Physical emblems made humanitarian protection visible on the battlefield. The Digital Emblem can help make protected humanitarian and medical functions visible, verifiable, and actionable in cyberspace. Turning that promise into practice will require sustained cooperation so that those who care for the wounded, the sick, and civilians can be more easily recognized, respected, and protected in the digital age.