Sovereign cloud stories
Demand for AI computing in India is outpacing domestic finance and data centre capacity, opening space for new entrants to move quickly.
Banks in tightly regulated markets will get help modernising systems without surrendering data control, compliance or operational resilience.
The tie-up aims to help large companies run AI agents securely at scale, while keeping data, governance and spending under tighter control.
Cloud operators can now sell AI infrastructure with validated software controls, as Rafay joins an early NVIDIA-approved group for production deployments.
Tighter EU compliance rules are driving demand for access controls as the security supplier expands its regional sales push across Western Europe.
Governments are weighing agentic AI to ease staffing pressure, but most leaders want stronger security and sovereignty safeguards before scaling up.
Fewer than 1 in 20 governments have made major investment, even as concerns over resilience and security push sovereign AI up the agenda.
Customers in regulated sectors will get faster AI roll-outs as the pact ties cloud migration, connectivity and sovereignty controls into one offer.
Only seven per cent of organisations are data ready, raising doubts over whether enterprise AI can move from prototypes to production.
Enterprises running AI across multiple sites may cut latency and costs as the partners link cloud, edge hardware and Kubernetes management.
Multinational groups in Europe will gain private links to an EU-based cloud, reducing exposure to public internet routes and sovereignty risks.
Businesses in New Zealand and Australia can now keep cloud data local as OVHcloud brings lower latency and residency compliance to Auckland.
It could ease compliance and data residency worries for firms that want to run OpenClaw agents without managing infrastructure themselves.
Strong recurring revenue growth lifted Commvault’s full-year sales to USD $1.184 billion, while SaaS jumped 52% and cash flow hit a record.
UK businesses face a growing data security dilemma as US laws can force American tech giants to hand over customer information.
Many firms still struggle to turn digital sovereignty aims into action, despite SUSE's new AI and infrastructure deals with NVIDIA and others.
Ottawa is courting private backers to expand domestic AI capacity, with no funding yet committed for the British Columbia project.
Argyll Data Development launches UK sovereign AI inference cloud with SambaNova, targeting regulated firms seeking local control over data and systems.
Regulated businesses could gain a governed private AI stack as Rackspace plans to add AMD chips to its managed cloud offering.
UK organisations can now keep sensitive AI workloads onshore as Argyll’s new cloud aims to ease compliance, trust and energy concerns.