Data residency stories
Japanese firms seeking local AI capacity will gain new GPU-backed cloud resources as the service keeps data inside AT TOKYO's data centres.
Singapore businesses can now deploy secure AI systems in private data centres, easing sovereignty concerns as demand rises across regulated sectors.
Most large US enterprises say AI agents are creating unmanaged financial and compliance risks, with many forced to reverse their actions.
Banks and retailers are adopting the platform as AI projects mature, with data sovereignty now shaping budgets, risk and infrastructure choices.
HPE has expanded its self-driving networking strategy with new AI, security and data centre capabilities across enterprise environments.
Regulated firms can now scan code for flaws without sending sensitive data to external AI services, as AISLE targets private deployments.
Verified user reviews have boosted Keepit's credibility as businesses seek stronger SaaS data protection and recovery tools in the cloud.
Enterprise customers gain more choice in dedicated hosting as Hetzner adds four Dell PowerEdge models with up to 86 cores and NVMe storage.
The 600-petabyte deployment is set to underpin regulated AI workloads in Australia as demand for onshore data control intensifies.
The new controls could help enterprises stop AI agents from exporting data or changing records when their actions stray beyond approved intent.
Many firms are adopting AI quickly, but weak data architecture is leaving them unable to measure returns or manage governance risks.
Investor relations teams could cut preparation delays and disclosure risks by keeping approved company material inside Q4's new AI workflow tools.
Customers will be able to enforce zero trust controls across more AI tools as Zscaler broadens its security programme to key cloud partners.
The update should ease compliance concerns for regulated firms by keeping incident data inside customer environments, including air-gapped sites.
Fragmented enterprise data is slowing AI rollouts, and the new software aims to find, classify and govern it across mixed systems.
It aims to help critical infrastructure operators keep sensitive security data and AI models inside UK-controlled systems during cyber incidents.
The move comes as Canadian customers demand more sovereignty, flexibility and human support from cloud and infrastructure providers.
Enterprises can now turn plain-language requests into reviewable AI workflows, as Dataiku seeks to close the gap between prototypes and production.
Australian agencies and regulated firms can now keep virtual machine workloads local, as Yurika and RackCorp target tighter data-residency rules.
Demand for controlled cloud services is rising as governments and regulated industries seek to keep sensitive data and operations within national boundaries.