Palo Alto-based company offers turnkey data residency solution
Skyflow, based in Palo Alto, California with offices in Bangalore, has launch its Data Privacy Vault on virtual private clouds running on servers in India, providing industry-leading security and compliance features, including a tokenization solution that allows companies storing data to comply with the Personal Data Protection (PDP) Bill of 2019.
Data localization has become a legislative priority for the Indian government. The PDP Bill restricts the storage, transfer and processing of personal data in India from 31 December 2021. Any company storing data of this type in India is required to implement a solution or face a severe restriction of features and functionality, said Skyflow in a release on 14 Dec 2021.
Skyflow offers a turnkey data residency solution using India-based servers so businesses storing personal data can comply with this law without the cost of developing a solution on their own.
In addition to powerful encryption, de-identification and data governance features, the Skyflow vault can localize and tokenize data in India in full compliance with the new legislation.
Skyflow’s tokenization features also make it easy to comply with new regulations from the Reserve Bank of India around the handling and storage of payment card data.
When a Skyflow customer needs to store personal data in a specific region in the world such as India, Skyflow creates a Data Privacy Vault for that customer within an in-region virtual private cloud. The customer’s developers can then use the Skyflow API to handle the collection, storage, encryption and processing of all personal data, ensuring compliance with residency regulations.
Spoon, a fintech company that works with millennial and Gen-Z customers located in India, stores customers’ personal data in Skyflow’s Privacy Data Vault located in Mumbai.
“Spoon’s mission of educating young adults about money and helping them access financial services requires us to be guardians of their sensitive data. Skyflow makes this easy,” said Kurian George, Founder and CEO, Spoon.
“Skyflow also makes complying with new regulations from the Reserve Bank of India, like those around managing payment card data or data residency, straightforward and simple,” George said, endorsing Skyflow’s Fintech Data Privacy Vault which is designed to accommodate the changing data residency landscape.
Skyflow not only limits vault access to individual customers, but also isolates the storage, protection, and processing capabilities of vaults within a single region chosen by the customer. The vault provides businesses with a fast and cost-effective way to satisfy any data residency requirements, whether it is India’s PDP Bill, EU’s GDPR, Brazil’s LGPD or South Korea’s PIPA.
Skyflow aims to help companies that are struggling to meet the data residency deadline and are looking for solutions.
“Any company that has customer data will benefit from using Skyflow’s Data Privacy Vault. Skyflow’s robust features make it easy to meet new regulatory requirements, from network tokenization of payment card data to data residency and beyond,” said Anshu Sharma, CEO and Co-Founder, Skyflow.
Skyflow takes a different approach to data privacy. Inspired by the data vaults built internally by companies like Apple, Google and Netflix that spend tens of millions of dollars on privacy, Skyflow has built a zero-trust data vault that any company’s developers can use. At its core, the Skyflow data privacy vault is powered by a radical new approach called polymorphic encryption, which utilizes the latest industry-standard encryption and tokenization algorithms.
Founded in 2019, Skyflow is a data privacy vault for sensitive data. “Our founders wanted to radically transform how businesses handle their users’ financial, healthcare and other personal data — the data that powers the digital economy,” said the company.
“Inspired by the data vaults that leaders like Apple and Netflix built to handle customer data, our vision was to deliver the same kind of data privacy vault as a simple and elegant API, something any developer could easily build into their application, the same way they use Stripe, Twilio, or Okta,” it said. fiinews.com