Global, Vendor

Mimecast promotes cyber resilience in Europe

Peter Bauer, Mimecast
Peter Bauer, Mimecast

Mimecast Limited has announced that its German data centres are open for business.

The the two new replicated data centres are in separate co-located facilities in Frankfurt am Main and operate on Mimecast’s own proprietary cloud infrastructure and MimeOS software architecture. Mimecast’s advanced security, business continuity and archiving services are designed to operate in accordance with GDPR (DSGVO) and German data protection laws.

“Germany’s cautious yet pragmatic approach to cloud is exactly why Mimecast is planning for rapid growth in the region,” said Mimecast CEO Peter Bauer. “Concerns remain over where data is stored and what happens when critical services like email fail, creating security risks and disrupting workplace productivity. Our new German data centres will allow us to help organisations adopt a cyber resilience strategy to secure, preserve and continue the flow of information via email.”

Mimecast services are engineered to support Microsoft Exchange, Office 365, Google and on-premise email environments.

International audit, tax and advisory firm Mazars is migrating services to the German data centre. Group CISO Jayson Dudley said, “Protecting client confidentiality and data security is paramount to our business and guaranteed data sovereignty in Germany helps us meet our European compliance objectives. Mimecast is our first line of defense against growing volumes of ransomware and phishing attacks by email.”

New Mimecast research* highlights only 13 percent of surveyed German organisations had so far adopted a complete cyber resilience strategy, while 88 percent felt this was ‘crucial’ or ‘very important.’

Most German organisations had also seen more email attacks over the last 12 months. The research revealed 48 percent had seen a rise in malware and ransomware through email attachments, while 35 percent had seen more impersonation fraud asking employees to make financial transactions. Moreover, 59 percent of German organisations were ‘concerned’ about the implications of not being GDPR-compliant.

The new data centres help form a global network of 12 data centres around the world across the UK, US, South Africa, Australia, offshore in the Channel Islands and now Germany.

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