As regulations like DORA and NIS2 tighten, companies in critical infrastructure and finance are finding that standard cloud providers cannot guarantee protection against the reach of the U.S. CLOUD Act. Omada’s new approach aims to eliminate this exposure by decoupling identity governance from specific cloud providers. By allowing organizations to host the software on their own infrastructure or chosen sovereign clouds, the company ensures that data remains under the exclusive legal and operational jurisdiction of the customer.
Omada Launches Sovereign Identity Platform to Bypass U.S. Cloud Control
Regulated European firms face a mounting clash between modern cloud requirements and strict data residency laws. Copenhagen-based Omada is responding to this pressure with its new Identity Sovereign platform, a containerized solution designed to keep operational and jurisdictional control entirely within European borders.

This move represents a shift toward a containerized, flexible deployment model that maintains full feature parity with existing SaaS offerings, including AI-driven identity insights. CEO Jakob H. Kraglund emphasized that the platform is built to satisfy the strictest digital sovereignty standards, specifically targeting the SEAL-3 level of compliance. With the product currently in development and slated for a 2027 release, the firm is positioning itself to provide a necessary alternative for entities that can no longer rely on American-controlled tech stacks for their most sensitive access governance.




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