Data in the EU
Self-hosted knowledge graph on European infrastructure, traffic to non-EU services minimised.
For many European companies, compliance is the first objection that blocks any conversation about AI. The question "where does our data go?" isn't only legal: it's commercial. DBRAINS answers by design.
The knowledge graph engine runs by default on European infrastructure: process data never leaves the Union. GDPR, NIS2 and the AI Act are part of the architecture, not a layer added afterwards.
Self-hosted knowledge graph on European infrastructure, traffic to non-EU services minimised.
Every AI operation is tracked, with rate limiting and role-based access control.
No automatic action without supervision: every agent proposal requires confirmation.
Data segregated per organisation. No sharing between different companies.
The regulatory countdown begins: every European company using artificial intelligence now has a deadline to meet.
Unacceptable-risk AI systems become illegal. The first line no company is allowed to cross.
Transparency and documentation for general-purpose models: the foundations the agents working on your data rely on.
The Commission's enforcement powers and the obligations for high-risk systems kick in. DBRAINS is built to be compliant from day one.
Connectors to external tools send drafts, reports and structured data, never the raw knowledge. Every transfer is tracked and requires human confirmation where applicable.
When vertical fine-tuning is activated, the model is hosted on a server dedicated exclusively to the customer. Training data, model and outputs stay within their infrastructure.
We'll show you in detail where the data lives and how the architecture answers GDPR, NIS2 and the AI Act.