LifeinCloud, a London based Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) company, is extending its European footprint with flights to London, Frankfurt, and Bucharest. The company is going against the current trend of businesses having to identify where their data is located and how it is handled by, in fact, doing everything from running their own data centers to using their own hardware.
Compared with those providers who are reliant on another party’s infrastructure, LifeinCloud builds and manages the facilities it uses. London and Frankfurt serve as production regions designed with Tier III availability, while the Bucharest site remains fully owned, giving the team control over everything from racks to routing. This setup allows businesses to choose workload placement with intention.
Observers highlight that such decisions now extend beyond regulatory requirements. They also shorten the distance to end users, reduce cross-border transfers, and simplify vendor evaluations. Moreover, LifeinCloud coordinates its business activities with ISO 27001 and GDPR requirements, giving an organization that is moving in a complicated compliance environment a transparent view, ready for an audit.
From a technical perspective, the platform runs on AMD EPYC and Intel Xeon processors for general workloads, while high-frequency Ryzen nodes power its gaming brand, LumaBlast. Developers turn to LumaDock, another brand under the LifeinCloud umbrella, for straightforward VPS that includes NVMe storage, static IPv4 addresses, and built-in firewall controls. The company engineers networking up to 10 Gbps per host and supports it with anycast DDoS protection and private networking options.
Security remains deeply ingrained at each stage. By default, instances launch with firewalls, encrypted backup features, and snapshot options. The team regularly tests disaster recovery, which reinforces the company’s claim of operational discipline. In addition, LifeinCloud delivers private cloud estates for enterprises seeking open-source building blocks and strict tenancy boundaries.
The expansion highlights a broader trend across Europe. Organizations do not just judge the providers based on their performance alone. Without a doubt, they are looking for platforms that can not only deliver measurable rapidity but also demonstrate governance and control over the data in compliance with the policy, thus, mirroring the fact that digital infrastructure is the new co pilot in the enterprise’s journey.
