- Report the complaints, one in three business does not trust us in Big Tech to properly manage their data
- Civo finds that three out of five are focused on improving data sovereignty
- Cost fluctuations induced by prices are also concerning British IT leaders
More than three out of five out of five IT leaders say that the country’s government should stop using American cloud services due to security and economic risks, many of which citing current war rates as a fundamental concern.
A new CIVO report says that a similar amount (61%) of British IT leaders also cites data sovereignty as a strategic priority in the future, with a broader tendency of data confidentiality emerging not only among the adoption of the cloud, but also on the use of artificial intelligence.
Today, almost half (45%) actively consider the repatriation of the cloud while they return to environments to which they have more control.
Cloud security and costs of costs
EU and United Kingdom data protection regulations offering better compliance and transparency, both fifths of IT leaders say they are more likely to move away from American providers.
At a time when three of the main global hyperscalers (Amazon, Microsoft and Google) represent approximately two thirds of the cloud market, Civo’s report only claims a third party (36.6%) in trust Big Tech Providers suppliers to manage their data, with the data of second place sovereignty at a price as a factor of influence for the decision to move away from Big Tech.
“People are more alert than ever how precious their data is, and it was amazing the speed with which the repatriation of clouds and sovereignty have become leading strategic considerations for computer leaders,” said CIVLO CEO Mark Boost.
“American suppliers do not meet [the] Request “for greater visibility on the storage and use of data, Boost added, noting that Europe opens the way in terms of sovereignty initiatives, urging the” United Kingdom to correspond to the energy “of its continental counterparts.