AI sovereignty for government.
Xinity runs open, OpenAI-compatible language models entirely inside your own infrastructure. Citizen data stays in-house, in jurisdiction, and under government control. Apache 2.0 open source, with no vendor lock-in.
Digital sovereignty is a policy requirement.
When administrative data flows through a US provider's API, it creates a dependency that collides with the goal of sovereign capability. Sovereign AI means models and data stay under your control, technically and legally.
How on-premise supports concrete obligations.
Apache 2.0 open source creates the basis for vendor-neutral procurement without lock-in. The source code is inspectable, the solution is not tied to a single supplier, and operation happens inside your own infrastructure.
Europe's sovereign cloud strategy aims to reduce dependence on third countries. On-premise operation meets that aim at its core: there is no provider outside your jurisdiction with access to data or processing.
As soon as data reaches a cloud API, the question of access by the provider state's authorities arises. Chapter V of the GDPR governs transfers to third countries. When processing never leaves your system boundary, that question disappears entirely: there is no transfer to a third country.
Data and model stay inside your infrastructure.
Xinity runs on your hardware, on your network, behind your firewall. There is no outbound data path to a model provider that you would have to secure or cover by contract. Apache 2.0 open source also means full auditability: your security team can read every line.