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- Report claims One in three companies does not relate to Big Tech to process their data correctly
- CIVO believes that three in five are aimed at improving the sovereignty of the data
- Tarif-induced cost fluctuations are also concerning British IT leaders
More than three in five British IT leaders say that the country of the country should stop using American cloud services due to security and economic risks, whereby many rates caused by trade are quoted as a core problems.
A new report from CIVO claims that a similar amount (61%) of the British IT leaders also mentions data -sovereignty as a strategic priority in the future, with a broader trend of data privacy that not only comes up with cloud -acceptance, but also with regard to the use of artificial intelligence.
Nowadays, almost half (45%) actively repatriate the cloud when they return to environments that they have more control over.
Cloud protection and costs ensure
With EU and VK regulations for data protection that offer improved compliance and transparency, two-fifth of IT leaders say that they are going to leave American providers earlier.
At a time when three of the world’s leading hyperscalers (Amazon” Microsoft and Google) taking into account approximately two-thirds of the cloud market, the CIVO report only claims a third (36.6%) trust Big Tech AI providers to process their data, with data sovereignty in second place as an influencing factor for the decision to leave Big Tech.
“People are more alert than ever how valuable their data is, and it is amazing how quickly cloud repatriation and sovereignty leading strategic considerations have become for IT leaders,” said Civo CEO Mark Boost.
“American providers don’t meet [the] Ask “for more visibility about data storage and use, added boost, and noted that Europe is running the way in terms of sovereignty initiatives, encouraging the” United Kingdom to match the energy “of its continental counterparts.
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