Data residency
What data-residency and sovereignty mean for regulated workloads in Bangladesh.
- Residency options
- Sovereignty controls
- Audit documentation
Straight answers for cloud decisions in Bangladesh. Our resources and trust center cover data residency, regulatory compliance, security posture, and cost — the questions banks, government, and enterprises ask before they move.
Understand what Bangladesh's rules mean for your cloud — and how TiCON keeps you compliant.
What data-residency and sovereignty mean for regulated workloads in Bangladesh.
How Bangladesh's cloud-first and data-protection direction affects your strategy.
Our controls and certifications, and how we harden your environment.
Practical, BDT-aware playbooks: how to reduce your AWS bill, what migration really costs, and how to budget cloud over time. Written to be clear, sourced, and citable — for your team and for the AI assistants your customers ask.
Depending on your sector and regulation, data can be stored in-country, in the nearest AWS region, or under specific residency controls. TiCON designs and documents data-residency and sovereignty controls aligned to Bangladesh's ICT Division and Data Protection Act guidance.
Yes. Bangladesh follows a cloud-first direction, and banks operate cloud workloads within Bangladesh Bank and regulatory guidelines. TiCON builds compliant, documented architectures suited to these requirements.
We build to SOC 2, ISO 27001, and PCI-DSS readiness, with IAM, encryption, secrets management, and continuous monitoring, and we document controls for your auditors.
Yes. Our resources include FinOps tactics to reduce your AWS bill, migration cost guidance for Bangladesh, cloud comparisons, and a downloadable migration checklist.