By Raphael Satter and Alexandra Alper WASHINGTON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration has ordered U.S.
Washington told diplomats to fight data localization abroad. The memo warns it could slow AI and cloud services.
Such initiatives are considered to be disruptive to AI and cloud services, but many countries are eyeing them anyway.
You’re probably all too familiar with the challenges of crossing international borders—long queues, restrictions on destinations, impacts on employment clearances and the threat of invasive searches.
Opinion

data localization

A new diplomatic offensive against foreign privacy laws collides with fresh research showing that weakening data sovereignty protections is the last thing organizations need right now.
In today's digital world, where data flows seamlessly across borders, privacy has become a critical issue for organizations. The trend toward data localization, driven by state security, intelligence ...
Companies should expect to face a trio of trends in 2024 that make data security, protection, and compliance more critical to operations and risk reduction. Increasingly, governments worldwide are ...
Microsoft has ticked off the second phase of its rollout of a data localization offering in the European Union. The latest deployment to the “EU Data Boundary for the Microsoft Cloud”, as it brands ...