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Taking back control: The business case for digital sovereignty

20 0
09.04.2026

As artificial intelligence scales across the enterprise, a structural tension has emerged. Computing power and data are moving in opposite directions.

Advanced model training continues to gravitate toward hyperscale cloud infrastructure, driven by GPU capital intensity, hardware supply constraints, and the absolute need for elastic scaling.

But enterprise data is getting heavier. The economic burden of cloud storage, aggressive egress fees, and latency sensitivity is penalizing large-scale data mobility.

This is the reality of data gravity. And beyond simple economics, it is now being reinforced by systemic geopolitical risk.

The Shift to Operational Survivability

Digital sovereignty has moved from a theoretical debate to a mandate for aggressive implementation.

For the C-Suite and Chief Risk Officers, geopolitical uncertainty is no longer an abstract concept; it is a critical external risk factor.

It is forcing a re-evaluation of core technological competencies, domestic industrial ecosystems, and the resilience of global supply chains.

The primary question for enterprise IT leadership has shifted from cost-efficiency to operational survivability: In the event of an external geopolitical rupture, can core business operations remain functional?

Global governments are already acting on this premise.

Following the........

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