Oracle Corporation Japan has on Wednesday announced that it plans to invest more than $8 billion over the next ten years to meet the growing demand for cloud computing and artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure in Japan.
The firm said in a statement that the investment will grow Oracle Cloud Infrastructure’s (OCI) footprint across Japan.
In addition, to help customers and partners address the digital sovereignty requirements in Japan, Oracle will significantly expand its operations and support engineering teams with Japan-based personnel.
“We are dedicated to meeting our customers and partners where they are in their cloud journey,
“By growing our cloud footprint and providing a team to support sovereign operations in Japan, we are giving our customers and partners the opportunity to innovate with AI and other cloud services while supporting their regulatory and sovereignty requirements,” said Toshimitsu Misawa, member of the board, corporate executive officer and president, Oracle Corporation Japan.
According to the statement, Oracle plans to increase local customer support of its public cloud regions in Tokyo and Osaka and its local operations teams for Oracle Alloy and OCI Dedicated Region.
This will enable governments and businesses across Japan to continue to move their mission-critical workloads to the Oracle Cloud and embrace sovereign AI solutions.
It is noted that Oracle sovereign cloud and AI services can be delivered securely within a country’s borders or an organization’s premises with a range of operational controls.
Oracle is the only hyperscaler capable of delivering AI and a full suite of 100+ cloud services locally, anywhere. OCI’s distributed cloud lineup supports:
According to the statement, OCI’s distributed cloud lineup supports dedicated cloud, hybrid cloud, public cloud and multicloud.
For dedicated cloud, customers can run all OCI cloud services in their own data centers with OCI Dedicated Region, while partners can resell OCI cloud services and customize the experience using Oracle Alloy.
Oracle also operates separate U.S., UK, and Australian Government Clouds, and Isolated Cloud Regions for U.S. national security purposes.
Each of these products provide a full cloud and AI stack that customers can deploy as a Sovereign Cloud.
As for hybrid cloud, OCI delivers key cloud services on-premises via Oracle Exadata Cloud@Customer and Compute Cloud@Customer and is already managing deployments in over 60 countries.
For public cloud, Oracle said forty-nine hyperscale public cloud regions serve any size of organization, including those requiring strict EU sovereignty controls.
As for multicloud, there are options including Oracle Database@Azure, MySQL HeatWave on AWS, and Oracle Interconnect for Microsoft Azure which allow customers to combine key capabilities from across clouds.
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