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Much the same way the word "patriotism" is more common in US national discourse, "sovereignty" is very common in UK national discourse.
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You're thinking of when chavs used to wear sovereign rings... it's fell out of fashion now tbh
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Data Sovereignty as a term is now fairly well established term that doesn't have specific government connotations e.g. https://events.linuxfoundation.org/kubecon-cloudnativecon-eu...
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He does say that? "running on NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs in the UK" is in there and that's pretty unambiguous.
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The problem is if those GPUs are running on an AWS server (or any other American provider), even if it the server is in the UK the sovereignty claim is null and void.
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Doesn't "We built it on fully UK sovereign cloud infrastructure, so data never leaves UK jurisdiction" cover that?
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In theory it should, but I've seen that language describing Azure "sovereign cloud" servers before. The data might indeed be stored in the UK, the problem is the CLOUD act which supersedes it.
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