Oracle reveals its plans to open two Oracle Cloud Regions in Morocco. This plan will provide enterprise cloud services to local and regional African organizations. In addition, the plan will enable Oracle customers and partners to migrate workloads from data centers to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and follow local regulations. It will allow customers and partners to access various cloud services to modernize their applications and transform with Data, AI and Analytics.
Also Read: What is General Data Protection Regulation and Why is it Important?
About Oracle Cloud Infrastructure
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) is Oracle’s comprehensive suite of cloud services designed to help businesses run a wide range of applications and services in a highly secure, high-performance environment. It provides a full range of services, including computing, storage, database, networking, and more, enabling companies to build, deploy, and manage workloads in the cloud effectively.
What is a Cloud Region?
A “cloud region” refers to the specific geographic location where your public cloud resources are physically situated. It is a common misconception that the “cloud” is merely an intangible, ethereal storage space. In reality, the cloud comprises devices that process data, known as data centers, located in specific places.
Factors to Consider When Choosing a Cloud Region
- Proximity: Select a region geographically closest to users or customers to minimize network latency and maximize performance.
- Feature Availability: Ensure the necessary services, such as high-performance computing, machine learning, data analytics, and IoT, are available in the chosen region. Service availability can be influenced by regulatory restrictions, infrastructure limitations, and varying user demand.
- Compliance and Data Sovereignty: Different regions have varying regulations and compliance requirements for data storage and processing. Some jurisdictions prohibit user data storage outside their territories. Select a region that meets your specific compliance needs.
- Disaster Recovery: Evaluate the number and distribution of availability zones in each region. More availability zones provide better redundancy and resilience during outages or disasters.
- Cost: Cloud service provider pricing can differ significantly between regions. Consider the cost implications of using resources in the selected region.
- Network Connectivity: Network infrastructure and connectivity options vary by region. High-capacity backbone connections, redundant network paths, and dedicated connections to cloud service providers can impact applications’ performance, reliability, and cost.