how kyndryl helps
Define your sovereignty objectives for resilient, confident business growth
Sovereignty trends impacting your business
How conversations around sovereignty are redrawing the digital map
As concern around data sovereignty increases, it will become a defining constraint on business strategy, forcing enterprise leaders to rethink how they store data, architect applications, innovate and compete.
Converging quantum, sovereignty and network demands expose readiness gap
Kyndryl Readiness Report reveals misalignment between infrastructure investment and preparedness for converging modernization demands.
Your questions answered
With rising geopolitical tensions, the concept of digital sovereignty has expanded from protecting data from foreign government access to the independent control of the entire tech stack — including cloud platforms, hardware, silicon, AI systems, operating systems, databases, middleware, and software applications.
Data sovereignty refers to ensuring that data is stored, processed, and governed solely under the laws of the jurisdiction in which an organization operates. This increasingly includes AI‑related data assets, such as training data, fine‑tuning datasets, prompts, embeddings, inference outputs, and model artifacts, where jurisdictional control, access, and retention are critical. One of the main priorities of data sovereignty is shielding data from extraterritorial access.
Operational sovereignty is the ability of an organization to independently operate, manage, and govern its IT environment. In situations where geopolitical events (e.g., sanctions) could require a hardware, software, or services provider to cease operations, robust plans for operational sovereignty are essential.
Technological sovereignty refers to ensuring that an organization’s entire technology stack is independent of foreign government control or interference.
AI sovereignty is an extension of digital sovereignty, describing the goal of countries and organizations to gain greater choice and control over all parts of the AI stack—from developing and managing AI systems to deploying them, as well as overseeing training data, models, and computing resources.
The most enforceable and actionable dimension of AI sovereignty is data sovereignty, which ensures that the data used to train, fine‑tune, and operate AI systems is governed in accordance with local laws and customer risk tolerance.