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Our partnership with Microsoft accelerates our Cloud journey and unlocks new, AI‑powered innovations that strengthen and elevate the travel industry.
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Learn how this collaboration strengthens Amadeus' multi-cloud approach and AI innovation to improve efficiency, reliability and growth in travel.
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From AI-driven planning and biometric check-ins to smarter disruption management.
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Amadeus, in collaboration with Globetrender, unveils the tech, policy and innovation coming to transform the face of travel.
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Driving integration, scalability, trust and integrity across the travel industry.
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What is the current landscape of European Cloud Infrastructure and Services (CIS)?
Currently, there are no European cloud providers offering regional fail-safe capabilities or disaster recovery (DR) capabilities at the application level.Likewise, there are no non-European providers that meet the specific requirements of European CIS (Cloud Infrastructure and Services) in the area of IT security as they do not pursue the approach of an open, digital ecosystem.
Existing disaster recovery solutions and associated "disaster recovery as a service" services are mostly offered by non-European companies. These services are provider-specific and only cover their specific services and clouds (vendor lock-in), with a focus on restoring capacities and data. They neglect other aspects that are particularly required in an open digital ecosystemsuch as internal and external connectivity, app dependencies, and access rights.
A key missing function is end-to-end recovery for operators of critical infrastructures (NIS2 & KRITIS) with strict requirements in terms of RPO (Recovery Point Objective) and RTO (Recovery Time Objective). DR solutions with strict RTO and RPO targets for critical infrastructure services are usually difficult to develop and expensive to operate.
As a result, critical services are often not operated "active-active" across regions, but rely on a passive DR solution. If the main data centre fails, the affected services must first be restored in the passive disaster recovery site (DR site). During this time, the critical services are not available.
As a consequence of this approach to DR, the IT services for critical infrastructures are often not sufficiently robust and reliable to guarantee rapid and comprehensive data and service recovery in the event of failures or cyberattacks, while ensuring uninterrupted accessibility for the users.
In some cases (e.g. banking or airport departure control systems) this is extremely problematic, as there is no guarantee that a critical transaction (money transfer, boarding, etc.) will only be carried out once.
A joint initiative to building the EU's next‑gen cloud migration platform.