Trust, Service Levels
We do not hand every institution the same number on a page. Service levels are defined for each sovereign engagement and underwritten by the architecture that delivers them: disaster recovery and high availability, multi-region resilience, and continuous monitoring, operated by your own team on infrastructure no outside party can throttle or sever.
The Reliability Thesis
A headline availability figure describes a hope and a refund clause. What actually keeps a national workload running is where the system sits, how it recovers, and who is allowed to reach into it.
The most fragile dependency in any platform is the one you do not control. When the infrastructure that holds your intelligence runs on a foreign cloud, its availability is only as durable as that provider’s pricing, its policy and its jurisdiction. On your own ground, resilience is engineered into the stack, disaster recovery and high availability, multi-region failover and continuous monitoring, and operated by your own people. Nothing external can throttle it, sever it or sanction it away.
The system keeps running on infrastructure you fully control. That is the only service level that cannot be revoked from outside.
The Reliability Architecture
Not a credit clause invoked after an outage. The engineering that keeps the service running, layer by layer, inside your own perimeter.
The Sovereign Cloud Platform carries disaster recovery and high availability as a native property, so the stack is built to survive failure, not to apologise for it.
Multi-cloud and multi-cluster orchestration under one control plane lets workloads span regions and fail over between them, all of it inside your own jurisdiction.
Structured L1, L2 and L3 knowledge transfer puts the people who keep the service running on your own payroll. Recovery does not wait on a foreign support queue.
Guardrail, policy and audit runtimes sit in the inference path, with observability across the stack, so degradation is seen and answered inside your walls.
Availability, response and recovery targets are written for your deployment, your workloads and your regulatory context, then held by the architecture above, not copied from a public tier list.
With the whole stack on your soil and under your law, there is no foreign provider whose pricing, policy or outage can decide whether your service stays up.
The Engineering Behind Resilience
Our engineering team is one of the top two contributors to the cloud-native ecosystem worldwide, so multi-region failover is an engineered property rather than a hope.
The service mesh and orchestration layers that isolate faults and reroute traffic under load are built by a team that creates and maintains this class of infrastructure upstream.
The depth to stand the resilient stack up inside your facility and transfer it to the team that will keep it running long after we have gone.
How a Service Level Is Set
A sovereign deployment is scoped to one institution, so its service levels are too. The commitment is written where the work is understood and backed where it runs.
Availability, response and recovery targets are agreed for your workloads, your criticality and your regulatory context, in writing, before the platform goes live.
Every target is underwritten by the Sovereign Cloud Platform’s disaster recovery and high availability, multi-region resilience and continuous monitoring, not by a refund invoked after the fact.
With L1, L2 and L3 knowledge transfer complete, the people accountable for the service level are yours, on infrastructure no outside party can throttle or sanction.
A service level you own is one no foreign provider can quietly rewrite.
Operational Resilience
Of the four outcomes of ownership, this is the one a service level lives or dies by. Operational Resilience is what remains when there is nothing external left to fail.
A platform is only as resilient as its most brittle dependency. When intelligence runs on someone else’s cloud, that dependency is a commercial relationship and a foreign jurisdiction, either of which can change without notice. Sovereign deployment removes it. The system keeps running on infrastructure you fully control.
Sovereignty is the architectural property of ownership.
Request the service level terms
Talk to us about a sovereign engagement and we will define the availability, response and recovery commitments for your deployment, backed by the resilience architecture and operated by your own team.
Service levels are defined per engagement and backed by the architecture that delivers them. We build your capability, not your dependency.