Microsoft’s European charm offensive continues, with a collaboration with the Spanish Government to strengthen cybersecurity and implement AI in the Spanish administration. Microsoft plans to quadruple its investments in artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud infrastructure in Spain, spending €1.95 billion ($2.1 billion) there in the next two years as part of CEO Satya Nadella’s commitment to promote digital innovation and the responsible use of AI. Brad Smith, president of Microsoft, met with Pedro Sánchez, President of the Spanish government, to present what is the company’s largest investment in Spain in its almost four decades of presence in the country. Smith is touring European nations to talk up Microsoft’s investments in the continent. Last week, he announced a plan to invest €3.2 billion in Germany on AI and data center infrastructure over two years. Microsoft will soon open a cloud region of data centers near Madrid, and has announced its intention to build a data center campus in Aragon that will serve European companies and public entities. These two infrastructures will help Microsoft’s cloud services guarantee security, privacy, and data sovereignty, and make the company’s entire range of AI solutions available to companies and public administrations. According to an IDC analysis, Microsoft’s data centers in Spain could add up to €8.4 billion to the country’s GDP and contribute to the creation of 69,000 indirect jobs over the period 2026-2030. A strategic alliance The investment commitment is part of the framework of collaboration announced by Sánchez and Smith. Both parties will work together on the application of responsible AI to enhance citizen services, on the promotion of AI-based innovation, and on the reinforcement of national cybersecurity and the cyber-resilience of Spanish companies, public bodies, and critical infrastructure. The strategic alliance has been defined under Spain’s national AI strategy and national cybersecurity strategy, and is based on four fundamental axes: extending the use of AI in the administration; promoting responsible AI; strengthening national cybersecurity; and, finally, improving the cyber-resilience of companies. They will share best practices with the aim of modernizing administrative processes and providing civil servants with the necessary AI tools to increase their efficiency and effectiveness, On the administration’s side, this will cover the deployment of generative AI solutions, and plans for training civil servants in the use of AI. Meanwhile, Microsoft will share its responsible AI design standards, implementation guides, and additional documentation on best practices in this area with the Spanish Agency for the Supervision of Artificial Intelligence (AESIA). In addition, with the aim of strengthening national cybersecurity and, specifically, the cyber resilience of critical infrastructures, Microsoft and the National Cryptologic Center of the National Intelligence Center (CNI-CCN) will jointly explore the improvement of early warning and response mechanisms to computer security incidents in public administrations. The technology company will also collaborate with the National Cybersecurity Institute (INCIBE), offering access to telemetry and global information on potential threats and cyberattacks that may affect Spanish companies and public institutions. Joint dissemination actions in the field of cybersecurity will also be established, aimed at SMEs and citizens. Related content news Platform lets creators monetize their content for use in LLM training Avail’s Corpus tool ‘flies in the face’ of comments made by head of Microsoft AI, says analyst. By Paul Barker Jul 17, 2024 5 mins Artificial Intelligence news ChatGPT users speechless over delays OpenAI has delayed an alpha release of its new voice mode for ChatGPT, citing safety and scalability concerns By Gyana Swain Jun 26, 2024 4 mins Generative AI Voice Assistants Artificial Intelligence news Public opinion on AI divided While many think it may benefit society as a whole, they find it hard to see what’s in it for them, highlighting some lessons for employers and developers. By Lynn Greiner May 28, 2024 7 mins Employee Experience Generative AI IT Skills news analysis There aren't nearly enough workers to support new US chip production Even as the semiconductor industry hopes to find and recruit skilled workers, a lack of talent could undermine national objectives, push up labor costs, and hinder the returns from the billions of dollars being spent, according to a McKinsey & Co By Lucas Mearian May 15, 2024 10 mins CPUs and Processors Government Manufacturing Industry Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe