Gigya's data centre helps with privacy

Gigya has opened a new data centre within Russian national borders to ensure compliance with the Russian Federation's Personal Data Protection Act, which went into effect on September 1, 2015. The bill mandates that companies which maintain online properties serving Russian citizens must store those citizens' data within Russian borders.

  • 8 years ago Posted in
The Data Localisation Trend
The new law reflects a global trend toward governments requiring that their citizens' data reside locally. Other recent examples of this include the recent regulatory shakeup in the EU, where the previous Safe Harbour Framework for securing U.S. -- EU data transfers was deemed invalid and ultimately replaced with the more stringent Privacy Shield agreement. In all, since 2013, 20 or so countries have either proposed or discussed potential laws which would require Internet data in those countries to remain within their borders.
To address this trend, Gigya employs a multiple data centre strategy to ensure that their customers avoid risk while still delivering seamless and trusted customer experiences to global audiences. By maintaining multiple data centres Gigya enables clients to conduct business internationally while remaining in compliance with local laws.
The New Data Centre
With hardware wholly owned and operated by Gigya, the Russian facility marks the company's fourth regional data centre; a continued expansion of a multiple data centre strategy to support regional compliance that includes sites in the U.S., EU and APAC regions. Customers opting to use this new data centre will meet regulatory requirements imposed by Russia while still securing both their Russian citizens' user data and international user data.
Gigya's new data centre is primary, not secondary, ensuring that Russian-hosted data remains discrete from non-Russian data. Gigya will assist customers using the new data centre in fulfilling the needed filing requirements for the regulation.
"We allow the world's biggest brands to safeguard nearly a billion customer records. The value placed on the security of this data is set to reach up to 4% of global revenues under the forthcoming GDPR, which comes into force in May 2018. Despite this, few businesses are ready to open their own regional data centres to satisfy the growing list of countries who are legislating for customer data to be hosted locally," says Richard Lack, Director of Sales EMEA at Gigya. "By investing in this capability on our customers' behalf, we can significantly scale down their costs, and their compliance risks."
On average, only 48% of digital initiatives meet or exceed business outcome targets, according to...
GPUaaS provides customers on-demand access to powerful accelerated resources for AI, machine...
TMF Group, a leading provider of critical administrative services for global businesses, turned to...
Strengthening its cloud credentials as part of its mission to champion the broader UK tech sector...
Nearly all UK IT managers surveyed (98%) state cloud investment is an organisational priority for...
LetsGetChecked is a global healthcare solutions company that provides the tools to manage health...
Node4 to the rescue.
Commvault provides cloud-first organisations with greater choice and flexibility to protect and...