The plan, which covers Microsoft products and services such as Azure, Power BI, Dynamics 365 and Office 365, will allow customers to store and process their customer data within the EU. Credit: MixMagic / Getty Images Microsoft on Thursday said it will begin rolling out the first phase of its European Union data boundary plan from January 1, 2023, that will allow customers to store and process their customer data within the EU. The move comes two days after the EU commission said it had officially begun the process of approving the EU-US Data Privacy Framework. Under the first phase of the plan, companies that use Microsoft products and services will be able to store and process their customer data within the EU. Microsoft has included Azure, Power BI, Dynamics 365 and Office 365 under the first phase. “With this release, Microsoft expands on existing local storage and processing commitments, greatly reducing data flows out of Europe and building on our industry-leading data residency solutions,” Julie Brill, corporate vice president at Microsoft, said in a blog post. The upcoming phases, according to Brill, Microsoft will expand the boundary plan to include the storage and processing of additional categories of personal data, including data provided when receiving technical support. Microsoft had announced the intent to launch the EU boundary plan in March, which was around the same time when the US and EU had agreed to sign the Trans-Atlantic Data Policy Framework. The framework was signed as large companies operating in the EU remained anxious over their customer data flowing outside European borders in wake of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) introduced in 2018. These companies were primarily worried about attracting large penalties, mainly due to US surveillance laws, which could potentially flout GDPR norms over misusing or breaching personal data without consent. While Microsoft didn’t offer any new details on how the plan will exactly work, earlier in March it had said that it will challenge any request for data transfer that doesn’t align with the Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy and Security Framework. The company, which opened and is constructing datacenters in more than 17 datacenter regions in Europe, said it will publish a new data flow documentation to provide transparent data insights for customers whose services will be included in the boundary. Related content news analysis Within two years, 90% of organizations will suffer a critical tech skills shortage Along with AI skills, skills in IT ops and cloud development are severely lacking, IDC reports. By Lucas Mearian May 31, 2024 7 mins Generative AI IT Jobs IT Skills news analysis Google partners with Magic Leap on mixed reality development The Magic Leap collaboration follows Google’s partnership to develop mixed reality devices with Samsung last year. By Matthew Finnegan May 31, 2024 3 mins Augmented Reality Virtual Reality Emerging Technology how-to Microsoft OneDrive cheat sheet: Using OneDrive in Windows If you have Windows 10 or 11, you have OneDrive. With this quick guide, you can learn how to sync, back up, and share files in OneDrive with built-in Windows tools. By Howard Wen May 31, 2024 15 mins OneDrive Cloud Storage Windows analysis Apple's mutating supply chain sees winners and losers Shifting manufacturing centers are generating fresh challenges. By Jonny Evans May 31, 2024 5 mins iPhone Manufacturing Industry Apple Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe