CROSS-STANDARD public interest · Wireless / IoT device
China-to-Azerbaijan Wireless / IoT Device Compliance Gap Matrix (ICTA / AzStandard)
AI-compiled from official public sources — cross-checked by multiple AI models, not human-verified. Informational only; see disclaimer. Public-interest, source-linked comparison of common China wireless and IoT device documentation against Azerbaijan requirements under ICTA (Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan — the national telecom regulatory authority) and AzStandard (Azerbaijan Standards Institute), covering ICTA radio type approval under the Law on Telecommunications (2005), AzStandard (AZS) conformity for radio equipment and electromagnetic compatibility, electrical safety for the 220 V/50 Hz European-plug (Type C/F) grid, local importer and authorised distributor requirements, and Azerbaijan cybersecurity obligations under CERT.AZ and the Law on Information Security. Azerbaijan is not a member of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU); it operates an independent national regulatory system with CIS heritage. Chinese CCC, SRRC, and CE documentation are not recognised and do not substitute for ICTA approvals.
GAP MATRIX
Compliance Gap Matrix
| Compliance item | Common China baseline | Azerbaijan (ICTA / AzStandard) | Gap / action | Source + verification date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cybersecurity and Information Security — CERT.AZ, Law on Information Security, ICTA Oversight | China has its own cybersecurity and data protection regime under the Cybersecurity Law of the PRC (2017), the Data Security Law (2021), and the Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL, 2021). China's MIIT and relevant sector regulators impose network security and data-handling requirements for IoT and connected devices sold in China, including MIIT's IoT security guidelines and network access security requirements under the NAL process. Chinese compliance with China's domestic cybersecurity laws does not satisfy Azerbaijan's Law on Information Security, CERT.AZ guidance, or Azerbaijan's personal data protection requirements — they are independent national frameworks. Chinese IoT device manufacturers exporting to Azerbaijan must separately assess whether their device's data flows, cloud backend architecture, and software update mechanisms comply with Azerbaijan's cybersecurity and data protection obligations.Cybersecurity Law of the PRC (2017) — mandatory network security requirements for network operators and critical information infrastructure in China Personal Information Protection Law of the PRC (PIPL, 2021) — personal data processing and cross-border transfer requirements in China Data Security Law of the PRC (2021) — data classification, security, and cross-border data transfer restrictions in China MIIT IoT security guidelines — network access security requirements for IoT devices sold in China under the MIIT NAL process |
Azerbaijan has enacted a Law on Information Security ("Informasiya təhlükəsizliyi haqqında" Qanun) that establishes mandatory requirements for information security of information systems and critical information infrastructure operating in Azerbaijan. CERT.AZ (Azerbaijan's national Computer Emergency Response Team), operating under the oversight of ICTA, is responsible for cybersecurity incident response, vulnerability management, and the issuance of cybersecurity guidance for connected devices and networks in Azerbaijan. ICTA, as the telecommunications regulator, has oversight authority over cybersecurity aspects of telecommunications equipment and networks. For IoT and wireless connected devices, the Law on Information Security and ICTA guidelines impose baseline security expectations: devices operating on Azerbaijani networks must not create undue cybersecurity risks, must support software update mechanisms, and must not be designed to route sensitive data outside Azerbaijan in ways that circumvent applicable law. While Azerbaijan does not yet have a formal mandatory consumer IoT product security certification scheme equivalent to the EU Cyber Resilience Act or the UK PSTI Act, ICTA's type approval process may in practice require security-related declarations or documentation for connected devices. Personal data protection is governed by the Law on Personal Data of the Republic of Azerbaijan, which requires adequate data protection measures and may restrict cross-border data transfers of Azerbaijani citizens' personal data.Law on Information Security of the Republic of Azerbaijan ("Informasiya təhlükəsizliyi haqqında" Qanun) — establishes mandatory information security requirements for information systems and critical information infrastructure in Azerbaijan Law on Personal Data of the Republic of Azerbaijan — requires adequate data protection for personal data of Azerbaijani citizens; may restrict cross-border personal data transfers CERT.AZ (Computer Emergency Response Team of Azerbaijan) — national cybersecurity CERT operating under ICTA; issues cybersecurity guidance for connected devices and networks ICTA (Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan) — regulatory oversight of cybersecurity aspects of telecommunications equipment and connected devices |
Chinese domestic cybersecurity compliance (Cybersecurity Law, PIPL, Data Security Law) does not substitute for Azerbaijan's Law on Information Security obligations or CERT.AZ cybersecurity guidance. Chinese IoT devices that transmit user data to servers located outside Azerbaijan (including servers in China) should assess whether this implicates Azerbaijan's personal data protection law. Device manufacturers should review CERT.AZ guidelines for any applicable product-level cybersecurity requirements and ensure that their ICTA type approval dossier addresses any security-related documentation ICTA may require for connected devices. While Azerbaijan does not yet mandate a formal consumer IoT product cybersecurity certification scheme, ICTA's practical type approval requirements for connected devices may evolve as Azerbaijan's digital regulatory framework matures. Chinese exporters should treat cybersecurity documentation as part of the type approval preparation process rather than a separate post-entry obligation.[INFORMATIONAL] Azerbaijan's Law on Information Security and CERT.AZ guidelines impose cybersecurity obligations on connected devices operating on Azerbaijani networks. Personal data protection law may restrict cross-border data transfers of Azerbaijani users' data. Chinese domestic cybersecurity compliance does not satisfy Azerbaijan's requirements. No formal mandatory consumer IoT product cybersecurity certification scheme is currently in force in Azerbaijan, but ICTA may require security-related documentation as part of the type approval dossier for connected devices. Manufacturers should review CERT.AZ guidance and assess their data flows before market entry. | CERT.AZ — Computer Emergency Response Team of Azerbaijan (under ICTA)2026-06-17 · reference |
| Electrical Safety — AZS / IEC 62368-1 for 220 V / 50 Hz European-Plug Grid (Type C/F) | China's mandatory electrical safety standard for information technology equipment is GB 4943.1 (aligned with IEC 60950-1), enforced through CCC certification. A newer standard GB/T 42315 (aligned with IEC 62368-1) has been published as China transitions away from IEC 60950-1. China uses a 220 V / 50 Hz grid (voltage-compatible with Azerbaijan) but uses Type A (flat two-pin) and Type I (oblique flat three-pin) plugs, which are different from Azerbaijan's Type C/F. CCC electrical safety certification to GB 4943.1 does not substitute for Azerbaijan AZS IEC 62368-1 conformity. Products must be adapted for Type C/F plug format for the Azerbaijan market, and new safety testing against the AZS adoption of IEC 62368-1 by an ICTA-recognised laboratory is required.GB 4943.1 — Safety of information technology equipment — Part 1: General requirements (CCC mandatory, aligned with IEC 60950-1) GB/T 42315 — Safety requirements for audio/video, information and communication technology equipment (aligned with IEC 62368-1; adoption and CCC mandate timeline to be verified with CNCA) China grid: 220 V / 50 Hz; Plug type A (flat two-pin, AS 3112 variant) and I (oblique flat three-pin) |
Azerbaijan operates on a 220 V / 50 Hz electrical grid, a legacy of the Soviet-era electrical infrastructure retained after independence. Plug types in use are Type C (Europlug, two round pins) and Type F (Schuko, two round pins with earthing clips) — the same European and CIS-standard plug forms used across the post-Soviet region. Electrical safety for electronic and electrical equipment placed on the Azerbaijan market is governed by applicable AzStandard (AZS) national standards. The relevant safety standard for audio/video, information technology, and communication technology equipment is the AZS adoption of IEC 62368-1 (Audio/video, information and communication technology equipment — Safety requirements), which has globally superseded the earlier IEC 60950-1. Azerbaijan's AZS standards in the electrical safety domain draw from GOST IEC standards (inherited from the CIS technical framework) and are increasingly aligned with direct IEC adoptions. Mains-connected wireless and IoT consumer devices with power supplies operating at 220 V / 50 Hz are within scope. Conformity must be demonstrated through test reports from recognised laboratories, and the evidence submitted as part of the ICTA type approval or AzStandard conformity assessment dossier. Chinese devices designed for 220 V have a voltage compatibility advantage, but plug configuration (Type A/I in China versus Type C/F in Azerbaijan) and certification framework differences require separate assessment and possible product adaptation.AZS adoption of IEC 62368-1 — Audio/video, information and communication technology equipment — Part 1: Safety requirements (AZS national standard, adopted from IEC 62368-1 via GOST IEC 62368-1 lineage) Azerbaijan grid: 220 V / 50 Hz; Plug type C (Europlug, CEE 7/16) and F (Schuko, CEE 7/4) — Soviet-era and European standard sockets ICTA (Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan) — requires electrical safety conformity evidence as part of type approval dossier for mains-connected telecom and radio terminal equipment |
Chinese CCC electrical safety certification (GB 4943.1 / IEC 60950-1 lineage) does not substitute for Azerbaijan AZS conformity under IEC 62368-1. While China and Azerbaijan both use 220 V / 50 Hz, the plug standard differs (Type A/I in China; Type C/F in Azerbaijan), requiring product adaptation for plug configuration. The conformity assessment must be conducted against the AZS adoption of IEC 62368-1 by a laboratory recognised by ICTA or AzStandard. Electrical safety conformity evidence must be included in the ICTA type approval submission dossier. The transition from IEC 60950-1 to IEC 62368-1 is global but new test reports to the AZS version are required regardless of prior Chinese testing history.[INFORMATIONAL] Electrical safety conformity against the AZS adoption of IEC 62368-1 is required for mains-connected wireless and IoT devices sold in Azerbaijan. Chinese CCC / GB 4943.1 certification does not substitute. Products must also adapt plug configuration from Chinese Type A/I to Azerbaijan Type C/F. Electrical safety test reports from ICTA-recognised laboratories against AZS / IEC 62368-1 must be included in the ICTA type approval submission. | AzStandard — Azerbaijan Standards Institute (Azərbaycan Standartlaşdırma İnstitutu)2026-06-17 · reference |
| Radio Equipment Conformity — AzStandard (AZS) National Standards for Radio Devices | Chinese radio equipment standards are issued by MIIT and SRRC and include GB 15629.11 (Wi-Fi / IEEE 802.11 standard, aligned with but distinct from ETSI EN 300 328 for 2.4 GHz) and YD/T series standards for cellular and IoT radio parameters. SRRC type approval validates conformity with Chinese radio standards before sale. Chinese GB-series radio standards and SRRC test reports are not recognised by AzStandard or ICTA and do not satisfy AZS radio equipment conformity requirements. While some test data produced to IEC or ETSI methods may be referenced in an ICTA application, full re-evaluation against AZS-applicable standards by a recognised laboratory is typically required.SRRC Radio Type Approval — State Radio Regulatory Commission of China (MIIT), validates conformity with Chinese radio standards before sale in China GB 15629.11 — Information technology — LAN/MAN (Wi-Fi / WLAN standard, China, aligned with IEEE 802.11) YD/T series — MIIT industry standards for cellular, IoT, and wireless device radio parameters in China |
Radio and wireless equipment placed on the Azerbaijan market must comply with applicable AzStandard (AZS) national standards governing radio equipment parameters, frequency use, and technical characteristics. AzStandard (Azərbaycan Standartlaşdırma İnstitutu — Azerbaijan Standards Institute) is the national standards body responsible for developing and adopting standards in Azerbaijan. Many AZS standards in the radio equipment domain are adopted from ETSI EN standards (European Telecommunications Standards Institute) and from GOST/IEC/ISO series inherited through CIS technical cooperation. Applicable AZS standards cover radio frequency emission masks, out-of-band emission limits, receiver immunity, and declared radio parameters that must be confirmed during ICTA type approval testing. While the ICTA type approval process is the regulatory gate, conformity with the underlying AZS radio standards is the technical requirement that must be demonstrated. Azerbaijan increasingly aligns its radio standards with ETSI EN series as part of its trajectory toward ISO/IEC/ETSI adoption.AZS national standards for radio equipment — Azerbaijan Standards Institute (AzStandard), many adopted from ETSI EN series (e.g., ETSI EN 300 328 for 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi/Bluetooth, ETSI EN 301 893 for 5 GHz Wi-Fi) and GOST/IEC series Law on Telecommunications of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2005, as amended) — establishes technical conformity requirements for radio equipment as a condition of ICTA type approval ICTA (Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan) — enforces conformity with AZS radio standards through the type approval process |
Chinese GB-series radio standards and SRRC test reports do not satisfy AZS radio equipment conformity requirements. Azerbaijan's AZS standards in this domain are increasingly aligned with ETSI EN series rather than Chinese GB standards, creating a technical divergence between what Chinese SRRC testing covers and what ICTA type approval requires. Exporters should confirm the specific AZS standards applicable to their radio product category with ICTA or a local technical consultant before commissioning tests. New test reports to AZS-applicable standards from a recognised laboratory are required; prior Chinese SRRC reports cannot simply be resubmitted.[INFORMATIONAL] Conformity with AzStandard (AZS) radio equipment standards is required as the technical basis for ICTA type approval in Azerbaijan. AZS standards in this domain increasingly adopt ETSI EN methods rather than Chinese GB standards. Chinese SRRC test reports do not satisfy this requirement. New testing against applicable AZS standards by a recognised laboratory is required prior to ICTA type approval submission. | AzStandard — Azerbaijan Standards Institute (Azərbaycan Standartlaşdırma İnstitutu)2026-06-17 · reference |
| Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) — AzStandard (AZS) National Standards Adopted from IEC CISPR / GOST | China's mandatory EMC regime for electronic and electrical equipment is enforced through CCC certification using standards GB/T 9254 (Information Technology Equipment emission, aligned with CISPR 22/32) and GB 17625.1 (harmonic current emissions, aligned with IEC 61000-3-2). For wireless devices, EMC aspects are also partly addressed in SRRC type approval and MIIT NAL testing. Chinese CCC EMC certification to GB/T 9254 and GB 17625.1 does not substitute for Azerbaijan AZS EMC conformity requirements. While both China's GB/T 9254 and Azerbaijan's AZS EMC standards draw from the same underlying IEC CISPR publications, the test reports must originate from laboratories recognised by Azerbaijan/ICTA, not from CNCA-designated Chinese laboratories.GB/T 9254 — Information Technology Equipment — Radio disturbance characteristics — Limits and methods of measurement (CCC mandatory, aligned with CISPR 22/32) GB 17625.1 — Electromagnetic compatibility — Limits for harmonic current emissions (CCC mandatory, aligned with IEC 61000-3-2) CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — CNCA, mandatory EMC certification for in-scope IT and AV equipment sold in China |
Electronic and electrical equipment placed on the Azerbaijan market must comply with applicable AzStandard (AZS) national standards for electromagnetic compatibility (EMC), covering both radiated and conducted emission limits and immunity levels. Azerbaijan's AZS EMC standards draw from two heritage streams: GOST standards (the EAEU/CIS technical legacy adopted from Soviet-era and post-Soviet standardization) aligned with IEC CISPR publications for emission limits and IEC 61000 series for immunity, and increasingly direct adoptions from IEC and ETSI. For wireless and IoT devices, EMC testing evaluates emissions outside the intended transmission bands and the device's resistance to electromagnetic interference from other equipment. EMC conformity evidence is required as part of the ICTA type approval application dossier. Azerbaijan's national EMC standards are separate from EAEU TR CU 020/2011 — Azerbaijan does not participate in the EAEU conformity assessment framework and EAEU EAC EMC certificates are not recognised as substitutes in Azerbaijan.AZS national EMC standards — Azerbaijan Standards Institute (AzStandard), adopted from GOST series (aligned with IEC CISPR 32 for emissions, IEC CISPR 35 for immunity, IEC 61000 series for conducted emissions and immunity) and increasingly from direct IEC/ETSI adoptions GOST 32137-2013 and related GOST EMC series — aligned with IEC CISPR publications, historically applied in Azerbaijan through CIS technical cooperation and now adopted as AZS standards ICTA (Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan) — requires EMC conformity evidence as part of the type approval dossier for radio and telecom terminal equipment |
Chinese CCC EMC certification (GB/T 9254, GB 17625.1) does not satisfy AZS EMC conformity requirements for the Azerbaijan market. While the underlying technical benchmarks may be broadly comparable (both reference IEC CISPR and IEC 61000 series), the test reports and conformity documentation must be issued by laboratories and conformity bodies recognised in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan is not in the EAEU and does not accept EAEU EAC EMC certificates. Additionally, Azerbaijan does not participate in the IECEE CB Scheme mutual recognition arrangement in a way that automatically grants recognition to Chinese CB test reports — this must be verified with ICTA. New EMC testing to applicable AZS standards, with reports from ICTA-recognised laboratories, is required.[INFORMATIONAL] EMC conformity against applicable AZS national standards (drawn from IEC CISPR and IEC 61000 series via GOST and direct IEC adoption) is required as part of ICTA type approval in Azerbaijan. Chinese CCC EMC certification does not substitute. EAEU EAC EMC certificates are also not accepted — Azerbaijan is not in the EAEU. New EMC testing from ICTA-recognised laboratories against AZS standards is required. | AzStandard — Azerbaijan Standards Institute (Azərbaycan Standartlaşdırma İnstitutu)2026-06-17 · reference |
| ICTA Radio Type Approval — Azerbaijan Telecom and Radio Terminal Equipment | Chinese wireless devices are subject to SRRC (State Radio Regulatory Commission of China) radio type approval for radio transmission modules and equipment, administered under MIIT. Devices using Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and other radio frequencies must obtain an SRRC approval number before sale in China. Terminal equipment (routers, modems, cellular devices) additionally requires a MIIT Network Access License (NAL). Chinese CCC certification covers electrical safety and partial EMC. Chinese SRRC, NAL, and CCC approvals are not recognised by ICTA and do not substitute for Azerbaijan type approval. Azerbaijan is not party to any mutual recognition agreement with China covering radio or telecom terminal equipment approvals.SRRC Radio Type Approval — State Radio Regulatory Commission of China (MIIT), mandatory for radio transmission equipment sold in China MIIT Network Access License (NAL) — Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, mandatory for telecom terminal equipment sold in China CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — CNCA, covers electrical safety and partial EMC for in-scope products sold in China |
All radio and telecommunications terminal equipment placed on the Azerbaijan market must obtain type approval and a conformity certificate or registration from ICTA (Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan — Azərbaycan Respublikasının İnformasiya Texnologiyaları Agentliyi, also known as AZINFOCOM). ICTA is the national telecommunications regulatory authority operating under the Law on Telecommunications of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2005, as amended). ICTA type approval is a mandatory Azerbaijan-specific requirement that is entirely separate from EAEU EAC conformity marking — Azerbaijan is not a member of the EAEU and does not recognise EAC certificates as substitutes. The scope covers all radio-frequency transmitting and receiving devices including Wi-Fi (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz), Bluetooth, Zigbee, Z-Wave, cellular (2G/3G/4G/5G), and IoT radio modules. Applicants must submit technical documentation, test reports from recognised laboratories, and a declaration or application for conformity assessment. Approved devices receive an ICTA registration number or certificate. Products must obtain ICTA approval before being imported and placed on the Azerbaijan market. CCC, CE, and FCC approvals are not recognised by ICTA and do not substitute for Azerbaijan type approval.Law on Telecommunications of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2005, as amended) — establishes mandatory type approval and conformity certification for all radio and telecom terminal equipment ICTA (Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan / AZINFOCOM) — national authority for telecommunications regulation, spectrum management, and type approval AZS standards for radio terminal equipment (many adopted from ETSI EN and GOST/IEC series) — technical baseline for ICTA conformity assessment |
Chinese SRRC approval, MIIT NAL, and CCC certification are not recognised by ICTA and cannot be used as substitutes for Azerbaijan type approval. A separate ICTA type approval application must be filed, supported by technical documentation and test reports from recognised laboratories. Azerbaijan is not an EAEU member and does not participate in the EAC conformity framework; nor does it have a bilateral mutual recognition agreement with China covering radio equipment. Products sold in Azerbaijan without valid ICTA type approval are subject to market withdrawal, customs seizure, and administrative penalties under the Law on Telecommunications. Timeline for ICTA type approval varies but Chinese exporters should allow 2–4 months depending on product complexity and documentation completeness.[INFORMATIONAL] ICTA type approval is mandatory for all Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, and IoT radio devices sold in Azerbaijan under the Law on Telecommunications (2005). Chinese SRRC, MIIT NAL, CCC, CE, and FCC approvals do not substitute. A dedicated ICTA application with test reports from recognised laboratories is required. Azerbaijan is not an EAEU member and does not recognise EAC certificates. | ICTA — Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan (AZINFOCOM)2026-06-17 · reference |
| Local Importer / Authorised Distributor Requirement — Azerbaijan | For products sold within China, there is generally no requirement for a separate local importer entity as a condition of CCC certification — Chinese manufacturers apply directly. For exports from China, Chinese regulations do not impose a symmetric requirement on the export side. However, for products exported to Azerbaijan, the Chinese exporter must partner with an Azerbaijan-registered importer, authorised representative, or distributor who will serve as the ICTA type approval applicant and bear local legal responsibility. This is a one-way obligation imposed by the Azerbaijan market: China's domestic CCC scheme does not have an equivalent mandatory local-entity requirement for foreign goods entering China under the same structure. Chinese exporters accessing Azerbaijan via the Middle Corridor (BTC route or BTK railway) should factor local entity setup into market entry planning.CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — CNCA: Chinese manufacturers apply directly; no local-entity equivalent required for foreign goods entering China under a mirrored structure China Customs — import/export declarations required but no mandatory local-representative registration equivalent to Azerbaijan's ICTA applicant requirement |
A local importer or authorised distributor registered in Azerbaijan is mandatory for placing wireless and electronic products on the Azerbaijan market. Under the Law on Telecommunications (2005) and ICTA regulations, the ICTA type approval application must be submitted by or through a legal entity registered in Azerbaijan — a foreign manufacturer (such as a Chinese OEM or brand owner) cannot file for ICTA type approval directly without an Azerbaijani legal entity acting as the applicant, importer, or authorised representative. The local Azerbaijani importer or authorised distributor bears legal responsibility for the conformity of imported products with applicable Azerbaijani regulations, including ICTA type approval validity, AzStandard (AZS) standard compliance, and labelling requirements (Azerbaijani language labelling in Latin script is required since Azerbaijan transitioned fully to the Latin alphabet in 1991 — Cyrillic labelling alone is not sufficient for the Azerbaijani market). The local importer must be registered with the State Tax Service of Azerbaijan for customs and import/export purposes. Azerbaijan's strategic position as a key Middle Corridor (Trans-Caspian route, BTK railway) logistics hub has increased the availability of established local trading companies experienced in Chinese goods.Law on Telecommunications of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2005, as amended) — requires an Azerbaijan-registered legal entity as the ICTA type approval applicant and responsible importer Azerbaijan State Tax Service — importer registration for customs and import/export declarations Azerbaijani language labelling requirement — Azerbaijani in Latin script (since 1991) required on product packaging and documentation for the Azerbaijan market |
A Chinese manufacturer or brand cannot file for ICTA type approval directly without an Azerbaijan-registered legal entity acting as the applicant. A local importer or authorised representative registered in Azerbaijan is mandatory and assumes legal liability for product conformity, ICTA registration validity, and post-import obligations. Azerbaijani language labelling in Latin script is required on product packaging — Cyrillic-only labelling is insufficient. This is a structural commercial and legal gap that requires establishment or appointment of a local partner before market entry; it cannot be resolved through product testing or documentation alone. Chinese exporters should factor local partner due diligence and agreement timelines into Azerbaijan market entry planning.[INFORMATIONAL] A Chinese manufacturer cannot file for ICTA type approval or be the responsible importer in Azerbaijan without an Azerbaijan-registered legal entity. A local importer or authorised representative is mandatory and bears legal responsibility for product conformity. Azerbaijani language labelling in Latin script is also required. This commercial-legal setup must be arranged before Azerbaijan market entry and cannot be substituted by product testing or certification alone. | ICTA — Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan (AZINFOCOM)2026-06-17 · reference |
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- CERT.AZ — Computer Emergency Response Team of Azerbaijan (under ICTA) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 1 rows
- AzStandard — Azerbaijan Standards Institute (Azərbaycan Standartlaşdırma İnstitutu) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 3 rows
- ICTA — Information and Communications Technologies Agency of Azerbaijan (AZINFOCOM) · accessed 2026-06-17 · reference · used in 2 rows