Why sovereignty has become the new measure of cyber resilience
In 2026, national economies run on data. The health of data centers and other critical IT infrastructure now determines the resilience and competitiveness of entire countries, and we’ve seen global corporations and public services brought to their knees by a single breach.
At the end of last year, the Bank of England linked a slowdown in UK GDP to the Jaguar Land Rover cyberattack, showing how a severe incident can ripple across the whole economy.
For a decade, businesses have been racing to put their data into cloud storage in pursuit of greater efficiency and lower costs. It was the obvious choice for those looking to gain instant scalability without the capital burden of owning and operating data centers. But in chasing convenience, many unwittingly ceded control over their own data.
The problem lies in where and how organizations' data is stored. Much of the world’s critical data, from financial...
Copyright of this story solely belongs to techradar.com. To see the full text click HERE