MS to offer cloud services from Germany
Microsoft Corp. plans to open data centres in Germany in partnership with Deutsche Telekom AG, offering cloud storage to European businesses keen to safeguard their data from US surveillance.
The services will be available in the second half of 2016 to customers in the 28 countries of the European Union and the four members of the European Free Trade Association, Microsoft said on Wednesday.
The move is aimed at businesses, mainly in the financial and health sectors, which have been concerned over the safety of their data after former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed a widespread US surveillance programme.
“This is clearly a proactive move by Microsoft to address concerns that have been building among European enterprise customers in this post-Snowden era,” FBR & Co analyst Daniel Ives said.
Many companies have been exploring alternatives since the Court of Justice of the European Union last month struck down a 15-year-old system enabling companies easily to transfer the personal data of Europeans across the Atlantic. While the US and Eur-opean governments negotiate a replacement for the so-called Safe Harbor pact, companies have considered legal measures, such as consent forms or contracts, as well as building more data centres in Europe.
Oracle Corp., IBM and Cisco Systems Inc. are just a few of the US companies that could be affected as their web-based services and large global workforces require user data to be shifted around.
“Other tech companies will be watching to see how Microsoft handles it,” said Ives. “It could be a sign of things to come.”
Speaking in Berlin on Wednesday, Microsoft chief Satya Nadella — who sees the cloud as central to the company’s future — said the new data centres were designed to ensure that clients’ data remains in Germany.