Q&A: How U.S. Companies Can Overcome European Regulatory Hurdles

Matthew Finnie is CTO at Interoute, a European telecommunications and cloud services provider. He's also an advisor to the European Commission on ICT research and innovation and a member of the CONNECT Advisory Forum (CAF), advising the EU commission on investment priorities as part of the Digital Futures and the Horizon 2020 initiatives.

Interoute, the largest cloud provider in Europe, recently said it will open a new data center in Los Angeles, part of its Interoute Virtual Data Center global network.

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Finnie talked with CRN Senior Editor Joseph Tsidulko about the many national laws and data sovereignty rules that make doing business in Europe such a challenge, and how Interoute's new U.S. facilities provide a platform that can help American companies overcome some of the regulatory hurdles and risks associated with international growth. Edited excerpts of the conversation follow.

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As a cloud provider, most associate Interoute with the European market. So why are you now launching a data center in Los Angeles?

Our new L.A. Virtual Data Center is the second location Interoute is launching in the U.S. after New York, which we opened earlier this year. The key reason for Interoute’s expansion within the U.S. is to give American organizations looking to expand into Europe a simple, yet competitive platform to deal with the complexities of the European market, which as a collective is huge, and accessing it is considerably more complex. Interoute bridges the gap between Europe and the U.S.

The flip side of this is for our U.S.-based customers who use our services in Europe but want the same thing back home. To serve the U.S. properly, you need at least two locations, so we’ve added the Los Angeles zone. In building out in L.A., we’re ensuring that we have connectivity between two zones in the U.S. that we control and offer an end-to-end SLA on. We’re also looking to add another zone in 2015 to cover the Midwest.

What kind of businesses does Interoute hope to attract with this physical U.S. presence?

Interoute has an established U.S. presence that has been serving the enterprise and Internet sector for many years, providing some of the largest and most well-known Internet based businesses in the world with super-fast speeds across the Atlantic and into Europe. Because we have Virtual Data Centers in seven European countries, including dual zones in Germany and triple in the U.K., our platform is a very practical choice for any U.S. business that offers or is planning to roll out services in Europe.

You can put your data exactly where you need it to be. Being able to stay on the same platform and deliver your services locally means they’ll be faster and better performing, but it also gives you one control plane which is simpler and easier to manage.

What kind of regulatory hurdles do businesses looking to expand into Europe face?

Europe has many different markets with different local rules and regulations for things like data protection, which can impact how and where you need to place data. European institutions such as the European Commission are looking for ways to streamline this, but the way it works in the E.U. is that any laws that are put in place are interpreted nationally with slightly divergent outcomes. As someone who sits on the EU’s ICT advisory board to the European Commission, I don’t see that changing any time soon.

So how do you get around this?

In effect, this means that for many businesses operating here, it’s often the most practical thing to put your data in the country where you use it in order to be compliant. Interoute has 12 years of experience in removing the real complexity of the European regulatory environment through straightforward compliance, allowing you to place data in the market of choice such as Switzerland or Germany.

How does this compare to the U.S.?

The U.S. is a much more homogenous market and does not pose regulatory challenges in the same way as Europe.

NEXT: Bridging Continents

So, it's really about being able to move data within an E.U. nation's borders when necessary?

Yes. The idea that you can serve Europe as one contiguous single market from one location really limits the breadth of application. Because Interoute is Europe’s largest underlying infrastructure provider, we get you closer than anybody ever can.

How do your new U.S. facilities actually connect American firms to Europe?

Because we know networking, we’ve developed our platform to allow for integration with your existing resources with our virtual resources, a bit like if you were assigning a network ID to each element you have, and then we tie them all together.

That means as soon as you plug into our platform, all of our locations across the world appear in your system. You can burst or migrate to them over time as you like. We make sure routing is optimized and that you are running within the core of the network, so it’s very fast. Plus, you don’t have to be penalized for going big and wide, because we give you free network on the Interoute Virtual Data Center platform.

What are the market realities and opportunities prompting the expansion?

We have many European customers that are global and want to expand into the U.S. and vice versa. The U.S. market is generally further along in its cloud journey than Europe, but mainly its experience has been focusing on purely Internet based technologies such as building a big online presence. Interoute’s core constituency of customers was always enterprises with hybrid needs between private and public infrastructure. Unlike the U.S., Europe is a collection of markets, which meant we had to develop the ability for customers to have the public cloud experience by creating private or public facing infrastructure.

What technologies will be deployed in the U.S. to support the expansion?

The Interoute platform gives customers a global pool of resources with networking and computing converged. There is complete automation so customers can create new resources on the fly. We use MPLS as the basis for creating different domains, providing strong logical separation between computing pools in the form of the Interoute Virtual Data Center. An Interoute Virtual Data Center zone, like the one we’re deploying in L.A., is a pool of CPU, Disk, and RAM that customers can use to construct their own Virtual Data Centers. Our CloudStore offers a range of apps that can be deployed on top, and Interoute’s communications heritage means we offer things like Video Conferencing, Hosted Lync, and Exchange that customers can easily deploy on the same platform.

PUBLISHED DEC. 15, 2014