This is an HTML version of an attachment to the Official Information request 'Information on the Zero.govt.nz service'.




21/03/2024 
Jim Parsons  
[FYI request #25573 email]  
Tēnā koe Jim Parsons  
OIA: 1323733 – Further information regarding the Zero Data Service 
Thank you for your email of 26 February 2024 to the Ministry of Education (the Ministry) requesting 
the following information:  
One - Can you please provide information about where the zero.govt.nz services are 
hosted within Azure. For example, are they in a DMZ network, which would be logically 
isolated from other internal services. 

Two - Can you provide a list of all top-level domain names that have been accessed from 
the zero.govt.nz service in the last 6 months, as well as the number of bytes 
transmitted/received OR number of requests. To clarify, for top level domain, I would group 
www.youtube.com under youtube.com, and www.facebook.com or web.facebook.com 
under facebook.com. If this data is not available in the requested format, then a list of raw 
domain names and number of bytes or requests would be sufficient. 

Three - In regards to the penetration test that you have mentioned has taken place, are you 
able to provide a brief summary of risks identified. You should be able to provide this 
information, assuming all risks have been mitigated. 

Thank you also for your email of 1 March 2024 in which you declined our invitation to meet and 
confirmed that you would prefer our response be provided in writing.  
Your request has been considered under the Official Information Act 1982 (the Act).  
In response to part one of your request, Zero Data (the service) systems are hosted in the 
managed cloud environments of government agencies involved with the service. These cloud 
environments have several layers of security built into them, including different forms of firewalls 
and other network security tools.  
We are unable to disclose specific information regarding the security controls that safeguard the 
service. Therefore, we are refusing part one of your request under section 18(a) of the Act, by 
virtue of section 9(2)(k) of the Act, as the withholding of the information is necessary to prevent the 
disclosure or use of official information for improper gain or improper advantage. 
Wellington National Office, 1 The Terrace, Levels 5 to 14, Wellington 6011 
PO Box 1666, Wellington 6140, DX SR51201 Phone: +64 4 463 8000  




In response to part two of your request, we are providing a standard report showing the top 20 
top-level domains by their total requests for the period July 2023 to February 2024, inclusive, as 
Table One of Appendix A.  
Please note that our standard reporting only includes the top 20 second-level-domains out of the 
approximately 700 domains noted in the report. To provide a breakdown of the 700 second-level-
domains would require the manual processing of a substantial volume of low traffic information and 
would be a significant administrative task to undertake.    
As required by sections 18A and 18B of the Act, we have considered whether extending, charging  
and/or further consulting with you would enable a more substantive response to be provided. 
However, we do not consider that any of these mechanisms sufficiently mitigate the significant 
administrative burden associated with attempting to provide a response. 
For these reasons, your request for all top-level domain names is therefore refused under section 
18(f) of the Act, as the information requested cannot be made available without substantial 
collation or research. 
In response to part three of your request, the penetration testing included both web application 
security testing and white-box host configuration review. We are unable to disclose information 
regarding the specific risks identified as part of this testing, as the withholding of the information is 
necessary to prevent the disclosure or use of official information for improper gain or improper 
advantage. Therefore, we are refusing part three of your request under section 18(a) of the Act, by 
virtue of section 9(2)(k) of the Act.  
As required under section 9(1) of the Act, I have considered the public interest in releasing the 
information withheld. I do not consider the public interest considerations favouring the release of 
this information are sufficient to outweigh the need to withhold it at this time. 
Please note, we may publish this response on our website after five working days. Your name and 
contact details will be removed. 
Thank you again for your email. You have the right to ask an Ombudsman to review my decision 
on your request, in accordance with section 28 of the Act. You can do this by writing to 
[email address] or to Office of the Ombudsman, PO Box 10152, Wellington 6143. 
Nāku noa, nā 
 
 
 
 
Stuart Wakefield 
Chief Digital Officer 
Te Pou Hanganga, Matihiko | Infrastructure and Digital
 
 
OIA: 1323733  



Appendix A  
Table One:  A breakdown of the top 20 top-level domains by request number and byte for the Zero 
Data Service.  
Destination 
Request1  Byte 
 
.education.govt.nz2 
3833208 
121305M 
.zero.govt.nz3 
3665936 
3566420K 
<error> 
345590 
1236543K 
.microsoft.com 
92994 
7016767K 
.amazonaws.com 
86698 
2564877K 
.healthpoint.co.nz 
71754 
8266988K 
.plunket.org.nz 
34038 
9790M 
.typekit.net 
31186 
1299607K 
healthify.nz 
20450 
3291558K 
.googleapis.com 
14230 
366486K 
.googletagmanager.com 
14140 
782307K 
.smallsteps.org.nz 
9404 
903521K 
.crazyegg.com 
8716 
42540490 
.google-analytics.com 
8454 
33625596 
staticcdn.co.nz 
7412 
16066286 
.youtube.com 
6894 
254753K 
.facebook.com 
5750 
12984592 
.typography.com 
5164 
5281304 
.justathought.co.nz 
4244 
120129K 
healthed.govt.nz 
4208 
117255K 
other: 700 2nd-level-
126882 18653M 
domains 
  
8397352 178943M 
 
Sum 
 
 
 
1 This is the Request as defined in HTTP protocol; i.e. every component of a web-page that browser 
“request” from the servers is counted as one request. 
2 The significant share of this line is the zero.govt.nz landing site traffic that is hosted on 
zero.education.govt.nz 
3 The large number of requests is reflective of the common components of the zero data service such as the 
ribbon rendered on top of every page noting the page is delivered via zero data service. 
OIA: 1323733