Tuesday, 14 July 2020

3 steps to ensure data sovereignty in cloud computing

Data sovereignty pertains to country-specific regulations that any data collected or processed must be subject to the laws of that country. This concept is different from data residency, which is a business prerogative on where data is stored, although data residency typically mirrors any data sovereignty laws that exist in a country.

The advent of cloud has made data sovereignty implications and implementation much more complicated. For instance, consider what it means for a U.S. enterprise using cloud infrastructure from a provider in the U.K. that also has customers in the EU. Data software engineering vs computer science may happen in Italy and, therefore, be subject to the data sovereignty rights of Italy, but since the data is stored in the U.K., it would be subject to the data sovereignty rights of the U.K. as well. To further complicate matters, if data backup happens in Ireland, it will be subject to the data sovereignty rights in that country too.

Confused yet? Given the complicated landscape that data sovereignty in the cloud exposes, it is prudent for enterprises to stay aware and compliant. Here are three ways to achieve this.




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