The article examines the digital transformation of public administration in terms of its impact on freedom of enterprise, property rights and the right to judicial protection. It is argued that the transfer of governmental procedures into platform-based, registry-based and algorithmic formats does not alter the constitutional nature of the relevant legal relations, but increases the importance of procedural guarantees. The scientific novelty of the article lies in the formulation of constitutional standards for digital administration, including normative certainty, reliability of public data, explainability of adverse decisions, the right to human review of automated conclusions, protection of legitimate reliance on official registries and effective restoration of violated rights.