Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing infrastructure needs: explosion in demand for computing power, massive integration of latest-generation GPUs, and ever-stricter requirements for security and compliance.
Faced with this major challenge: how to combine performance, data sovereignty, and environmental sustainability?
OUTSCALE, a Dassault Systèmes brand, offers a SecNumCloud-qualified sovereign Cloud capable of hosting sensitive AI workloads within a framework compliant with European requirements.
In partnership with Telehouse, whose data centers located in France meet the highest international standards, OUTSCALE provides infrastructures suited to new high-density AI workloads: modular architectures, optimized connectivity, and advanced cooling solutions.
“What we prioritize are infrastructures that are local because we need to guarantee sovereignty. […] to ensure the commitments we have made to our clients […] and data localization, all within a SecNumCloud regulatory context.” Arnaud Bertrand, CTO OUTSCALE, Dassault Systèmes.
Beyond performance, the challenge is also environmental. The rise of AI requires reflection on energy efficiency and resource optimization. This is why this collaboration integrates solutions from the outset aimed at improving infrastructure resilience and sustainability.
“The challenges of artificial intelligence are numerous for OUTSCALE. The first challenge is to ensure that this AI can be sovereign when our clients want sovereign AIs. […] The second aspect concerns infrastructure issues; with AI, we have to go for water cooling otherwise we don’t have sufficient density to industrialize artificial intelligence solutions […] while ensuring it runs on closed circuits and paying attention to energy efficiency,” states Arnaud Bertrand, CTO OUTSCALE, Dassault Systèmes.
Our conviction is clear: the future of Cloud infrastructures will be sovereign, intelligent, and responsible.
Discover in our video how OUTSCALE and Telehouse are together preparing tomorrow’s strategic infrastructures.
