European Infrastructure
eustella deliberately avoids AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. These are US-headquartered companies subject to the US CLOUD Act, which allows American authorities to access data on their servers regardless of where those servers are located. An AWS data centre in Frankfurt is still legally American infrastructure.
Instead, eustella works exclusively with European cloud and infrastructure providers — companies headquartered in the EU, governed by EU law, and outside the jurisdictional reach of foreign governments. This is what separates genuine European sovereignty from marketing claims.
European Providers
European providers on our radar
Europe has a growing ecosystem of cloud and infrastructure providers that offer genuine alternatives to US hyperscalers. As eustella evaluates partners for its public launch, these are some of the European providers we are considering:
IONOS
One of Europe's largest hosting and cloud providers, headquartered in Montabaur, Germany. IONOS operates data centres across Europe and is a subsidiary of United Internet AG, a publicly traded German company.
STACKIT
The cloud platform of the Schwarz Group (Lidl, Kaufland), headquartered in Neckarsulm, Germany. STACKIT was built specifically as a sovereign European alternative to US hyperscalers, with all data centres located in Germany.
Hetzner
An independent German hosting company based in Gunzenhausen, Germany. Known for high-performance dedicated servers and competitive pricing, Hetzner operates data centres in Nuremberg, Falkenstein, and Helsinki.
myInternex
An Austrian infrastructure provider based in Vienna — close to eustella's headquarters. myInternex offers hosting and connectivity services fully within Austrian and EU jurisdiction.
Scaleway
A French cloud provider headquartered in Paris, part of the Iliad Group. Scaleway offers managed GPU instances and AI inference APIs, making it a European alternative for GPU-intensive AI workloads.
eustella will announce its exact infrastructure partners at public launch. What we can say now: eustella will only work with providers headquartered in the EU, governed by EU law, and outside the reach of the US CLOUD Act.
Why This Matters
European providers mean European law — without exceptions
When your data is processed by a European company on European servers, it is protected exclusively by European law. No foreign government can compel access through extraterritorial legislation like the US CLOUD Act. That is the baseline eustella requires from every infrastructure partner.
Many AI startups choose AWS or Azure because it is easier, cheaper, or what their investors prefer. eustella chose differently because sovereignty is not a feature you add later. It is a decision about who has legal authority over your data — and eustella made that decision before writing a single line of code.
eustella may use multiple providers simultaneously and may add or change providers as the European cloud ecosystem evolves. What will not change is the principle: European companies, European servers, European jurisdiction. Once eustella launches publicly, we will publish our exact infrastructure partners on this page.
Multi-Provider Architecture
No single point of failure, no single vendor dependency
eustella does not depend on a single cloud provider. By working with multiple European infrastructure companies, eustella maintains operational flexibility — if one provider experiences downtime, has a pricing change, or shifts strategy, eustella can move workloads without rebuilding the product.
This multi-provider approach mirrors the same philosophy eustella applies to AI models: never depend on a single vendor, always maintain the ability to switch, and keep full control over every layer of the stack.
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