OUTSCALE, the sovereign cloud and AI brand of Dassault Systèmes, has announced a series of new technologies and strategic initiatives aimed at helping enterprises and public-sector organisations accelerate cloud and artificial intelligence adoption while maintaining control over sensitive data, infrastructure, and intellectual property.
The announcements were made at OUTSCALE EXPERIENCES 2026, the company's annual event focused on sovereign cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and data protection.
Among the key developments is the launch of AI Factories by OUTSCALE, a new offering designed to help organisations industrialise AI deployment within a sovereign and compliant environment. The company also introduced OUTSCALE Managed Databases, a new managed services portfolio that debuts with OUTSCALE Managed NuoDB, aimed at simplifying database operations for enterprise customers.
In addition, OUTSCALE revealed that its Kubernetes as a Service platform is committed to achieving SecNumCloud 3.2 qualification, a benchmark for trusted cloud services in France. The company also announced the availability of a quantum emulator through the OUTSCALE Marketplace, enabling organisations to explore and prepare for emerging quantum computing use cases.
As part of its broader innovation strategy, OUTSCALE announced a partnership with PariSanté Campus and Dassault Systèmes' 3DEXPERIENCE Lab to support health technology startups. The initiative is designed to help healthcare innovators develop and industrialise solutions on a sovereign, secure, and compliant technology foundation from the earliest stages of development.
The collaboration aims to provide startups with access to cloud infrastructure, AI capabilities, and expertise that can help accelerate innovation while addressing regulatory, cybersecurity, and data sovereignty requirements in the healthcare sector.
OUTSCALE highlighted its unique position within the Dassault Systèmes ecosystem, leveraging decades of experience supporting highly regulated and innovation-intensive industries. As the cloud and AI operator of Dassault Systèmes, the company serves organisations that require advanced capabilities for product development, industrial simulation, virtual twins, and intellectual property protection.
According to the company, the increasingly stringent requirements of industrial clients have helped shape its technology roadmap, resulting in cloud and AI solutions designed to meet the needs of organisations operating in critical and regulated environments.
The latest announcements reflect growing demand for sovereign cloud infrastructure and trusted AI platforms as organisations across industries seek to balance innovation, compliance, and data security in an increasingly complex digital landscape.


