China’s data sovereignty push is tightening cross-border data flows. New cybersecurity amendments raise risks for U.S. companies—and Trump is responding.
A new diplomatic offensive against foreign privacy laws collides with fresh research showing that weakening data sovereignty protections is the last thing organizations need right now.
By Raphael Satter and Alexandra Alper WASHINGTON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration has ordered U.S.
National data localization laws are creating more than just compliance issues for companies — they're also potentially opening cybersecurity gaps that attackers can exploit. In recent years, laws ...
The Trump administration has ordered U.S. diplomats to lobby against countries' attempts to regulate how American tech ...
Adapting your applications and infrastructure to regional mandates is critical for compliance, but it can inadvertently create cybersecurity blind spots. Data localization laws, while aiming to ...
The Trump administration is urging U.S. diplomats to oppose international regulations on tech companies' data handling, ...
Scrutiny of European Union's dependence on non-European cloud services is intensifying amid geopolitical tensions and rising cyber risk. U.S. hyperscalers control more than 70% of the EU cloud market, ...
Discover the top DCIM software trends shaping the future of data centers in 2025. From AI-powered predictive maintenance to sustainability-focused tools, hybrid cloud management, and real-time ...
Washington told diplomats to fight data localization abroad. The memo warns it could slow AI and cloud services.
Numerous countries around the world, as well as the European Union, have enacted laws to encourage or require that data generated in a particular place be stored within their jurisdiction, and place ...
Today, the movement of data across borders has become as vital as the movement of goods and capital. The principle of Data Free Flow with Trust (DFFT), first popularized by Japan during the G20 Osaka ...