#datalocalization
I have the unenviable task of defending #DataLocalization at @rightscon, on Mar 25. Debating against @headhntr & @carterkr! Worried, tbh.
February 13, 2025 at 6:37 AM
The trend towards digital home rule & #datalocalization has been building for over a decade. It's now becoming the new norm as jurisdictions of all political stripes are beginning to assert themselves over digital spaces in earnest & building new #DigitalBerlinWalls, brick by brick. #splinternet
August 22, 2025 at 9:10 PM
How are you adapting your cloud strategy to evolving data sovereignty laws? Let’s trade insights and ideas—share your approach in the comments. #SovereignCloud #DigitalTransformationLeadership #CloudCompliance #DataLocalization #CIOPriorities
medium.com/@sanjay.mohi...
Sovereign Cloud: Balancing Global Tech with Local Data Regulations.
Sanjay K Mohindroo
medium.com
September 19, 2025 at 3:02 PM
This fine sets a record for GDPR and it requires Meta to delete the data within six months and to stop all data transfers going forward. #DataPrivacy #DataLocalization
May 22, 2023 at 10:21 AM
3/7
A key and growing concern is the storage of Canadians' sensitive health information on servers located outside of Canada.

Michael Geist urged the commissioners to consider whether #DataLocalization —requiring that data be stored within Canada—should be enforced under Canadian law.
#HealthData
October 13, 2025 at 5:54 PM
Where data lives shapes how it’s protected.
Localization laws don’t define privacy—but they define jurisdiction.
Your region settings aren’t just technical—they’re legal.
#Privacy #DataLocalization #B2B
October 31, 2025 at 11:28 PM
Data Sovereignty in the Age of Geopolitical Uncertainty #datalocalization #datasovereignty #enterpriseITresilience
Data Sovereignty in the Age of Geopolitical Uncertainty
  From the ongoing war in Ukraine, to instability in the Middle East, and rising tensions in the South China Sea, global conflicts are proving that digital systems are deeply exposed to geopolitical risks. Speaking at London Tech Week, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer highlighted how warfare has evolved, noting that it “has changed profoundly,” and emphasizing that technology and AI are now “hard wired” into national defense. His remarks underscored a critical point—IT infrastructure and data management must be approached with security at the forefront. But achieving this is no easy task. New research from Civo reveals that 83% of UK IT leaders believe geopolitical pressures threaten their ability to control data, while 61% identify sovereignty as a strategic priority. Yet, only 35% know exactly where their data is located. This isn’t just a compliance concern—it signals a disconnect between infrastructure, policy, and long-term strategy. Once seen as a policy or legal issue, data sovereignty is now a live operational necessity. With regulatory fragmentation, mounting cyber threats, and increasingly complex data ecosystems, organizations must actively manage sovereignty. Whether it’s controlling access to AI training data or meeting residency rules in healthcare, sovereignty dictates what businesses can and cannot do. Legislative frameworks such as the EU Data Act, the UK’s evolving stance post-Brexit, and stricter critical infrastructure policies are shaping enterprise resilience. As Lord Ricketts stated in the House of Lords, “the safe and effective exchange of data underpins our trade and economic links with the EU and co-operation between our law-enforcement bodies.” Building trust now depends on robust and enforceable data governance. Public cloud adoption has given many businesses the illusion of flexibility, but moving quickly isn’t the same as moving securely. Data localization, jurisdictional controls, and aligned security policies must be central to enterprise strategy. This demands a shift: design IT systems for agility with control, or risk disruption when regulations inevitably change. Sovereignty-aware infrastructure is not about isolation, but about visibility, governance, and adaptability. Organizations must know where data is stored, who can access it, how it travels, and which policies apply at each stage. A hybrid multicloud approach offers the flexibility to scale, while keeping sovereignty and governance intact. For instance, financial firms may need to keep sensitive transaction data within the UK but still run analytics in the cloud—an architecture that enables agility without sacrificing compliance. Generative AI further complicates sovereignty. Training models with private datasets, deploying inference at the edge, or simply exchanging prompts across jurisdictions introduces new risks. Many businesses have embraced AI without aligning deployments with residency or compliance requirements. Sovereignty now extends beyond storage—it covers compute, access patterns, and third-party model interactions. Building sovereignty into design requires collaboration between IT, legal, and compliance teams, as well as infrastructure that supports location-aware policies from day one. Research from Nutanix shows the urgency: 94% of public sector bodies are using generative AI tools, yet 92% admit their security isn’t sufficient, and 81% say their infrastructure falls short of sovereignty needs. Customers and partners are increasingly demanding transparency—knowing where data resides, how it is used, and whether governance is enforced. Regulators are also raising expectations beyond “checkbox compliance.” In sectors like healthcare, education, finance, and government, sovereignty is now synonymous with trust and continuity. The path forward starts with clarity. Organizations must know where their data lives, what laws apply, and whether their infrastructure can support hybrid deployment, location controls, and detailed audits. They must also plan for generative AI workloads with sovereignty in mind, ensuring scale does not come at the expense of compliance. Ultimately, sovereignty should be treated not as a restriction, but as a design principle. Businesses that do this will not only remain compliant but will also build resilience, transparency, and long-term trust. In an environment where data moves faster than regulation, maintaining control is no longer optional—it is fundamental to good governance and sound business strategy.
dlvr.it
September 7, 2025 at 2:19 PM
How are you adapting your cloud strategy to evolving data sovereignty laws? Let’s trade insights and ideas—share your approach in the comments. #SovereignCloud #DigitalTransformationLeadership #CloudCompliance #DataLocalization #CIOPriorities #EmergingTechnologyStrategy
medium.com/@sanjay.mohi...
Sovereign Cloud: Balancing Global Tech with Local Data Regulations.
Sanjay K Mohindroo
medium.com
September 19, 2025 at 3:04 PM
Digital home rule & #datalocalization is a long time coming but it is now becoming the new norm as countries of all political stripes are slowly building a new #DigitalBerlinWall, brick-by-brick.
September 22, 2024 at 8:50 PM
I have the unenviable task of defending #DataLocalization at @rightscon, on Mar 25. Debating against @headhntr & @carterkr! Worried, tbh.
February 1, 2025 at 11:40 AM
For Indian enterprises, data sovereignty isn't optional—it's critical.
Learn how local regulations like DPDP make onshore data storage and sovereign cloud essential for compliance and security.

#DataSovereignty #IndiaCloud #Compliance #ESDSCloud #DataLocalization #EnterpriseIT
Why Data Sovereignty Is Important for Indian Enterprises
Discover why Data Sovereignty is critical for Indian enterprises. Learn laws, risks, and how ESDS Sovereign Cloud ensures compliance and security.
www.esds.co.in
August 27, 2025 at 2:14 PM