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Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia have recently signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) as follow-up to a NATO Workshop on Networking Development in the Caucasus Region. The MOU provides for the three countries to work together to realise common networking goals. Co-ordination of the region's networks will encourage standardization, compatibility and exchange of information. The stated aims are to foster increased political stability and free exchange of views, and to rebuild the links between the scientific and educational communities of these states once part of the former Soviet Union. To achieve the goals set out in the MOU, it is the intention to create a single management organisation comprising one representative from each country.

A similar NATO workshop will take place in Potoroz, Slovenia, in two weeks' time, dealing with Advanced Security Technologies in Networking. The workshop is intended to promote awareness of the need for security technology in the growing use of the Internet for administration, e-commerce, intra-organisation communication, health care applications, and research. Security infrastructure is gradually becoming part of the regular network services in the USA and Western European countries. Unfortunately, this is still not the case in the majority of Central and Eastern European countries. Expert speakers from NATO countries will transfer their knowledge about security services provision to Partner-country experts and users from different environments such as commerce, industry, administration and research.