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IAAS meaning

What does IAAS mean?
IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) describes a cloud computing arrangement in which a customer rents computing infrastructure—virtual servers, storage and networking—from a third‑party provider, while the customer configures and manages the operating systems, middleware and applications it runs on that infrastructure. The term is not defined in legislation or case law; it is a descriptive expression used in IT and outsourcing contracts and is applied consistently across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland. Key legal features in IaaS contracts include the shared responsibility model and risk allocation; service levels/availability and service credits; information security and data protection compliance (UK GDPR/EU GDPR), including data processing clauses, data residency, international transfers and audit/assurance; business continuity and disaster recovery; change control; subcontracting/supply chain transparency; intellectual property and licensing for customer software; liability caps and exclusions; and termination, exit assistance, portability and secure deletion to mitigate vendor lock‑in. Regulated sectors may face additional requirements (for example, FCA/PRA and EBA/Central Bank of Ireland outsourcing and cloud guidance, and the UK Network and Information Systems Regulations and NIS2‑based regimes in Ireland). Public procurement and records obligations can also be relevant for public sector customers.
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View the related Practice Notes about IAAS

PRACTICE NOTES
Negotiating UK cloud and outsourcing contracts with hyperscalers and CSPs: buyer guidance on service changes, suspension, termination, liability and audit rights

This Practice Note This Practice Note examines the impact of hyperscalers and leading cloud service providers (CSPs) on IT outsourcing, as well as prevailing market approaches to negotiating and drafting the relevant agreements from a UK purchaser’s standpoint. We now live in an environment in which most technology and business process services are consumed on an ‘as a service’ model; that is, they are delivered through the cloud, either as a turnkey solution or by having the pertinent applications hosted offsite. Although some cloud services target discrete or niche needs, others are extensive and/or mission‑critical and may entail significant levels of contract expenditure. See Practice Note: The evolution of IT outsourcing. Accordingly, market practice is shaped by which provisions are commonly debated and how impacted contracts are framed when engaging with such providers. Against this backdrop, close attention is paid to the contractual terms settled with CSPs, including, though not confined to, the ‘hyperscalers’, namely those offering large‑scale infrastructure as a service (IaaS) and platform as a service (PaaS)...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Technology, Media and Telecoms (TMT): a new practitioner guide to transactions, regulation, data protection and emerging technologies, with precedents, trackers and resources

New starter guide This new starter guide introduces the technology, media and telecoms (TMT) practice area and the kinds of transactions lawyers in this field routinely handle. It is aimed at trainee solicitors and anyone unfamiliar with any of the topics within TMT. What technology lawyers do What media lawyers do What telecoms lawyers do Key TMT topics Q&As Further reading materials Essential external links for TMT lawyers Key resources tab This guide helps you make the most of LexisNexis® TMT materials by showing how to locate them, sign up for email alerts, access Q&As and send a query to the LexisAsk team. If a point is not covered here, use the Topics tab on the TMT homepage, or the Topics dropdown on any page, to explore further practice area content. At the highest level, TMT lawyers focus on either contentious work (disputes) or non-contentious work (transactions or advisory). Contentious TMT practitioners support clients in...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK fixed-line telecoms: networks, interconnection, local loop unbundling, broadband, wholesale access, NGNs, cloud and SDN—an at-a-glance guide for commercial lawyers

This Practice Note provides a concise, at-a-glance overview of the fixed line telecoms industry for commercial lawyers. Fixed lines Section 32(1) of the Communications Act 2003 defines an ‘electronic communications network’ as: a transmission system conveying signals of any description by electrical, magnetic or electro-magnetic energy; and associated items used by the provider, in association with that system, for the conveyance of the signals, comprising: apparatus forming part of the system; apparatus for switching or routing the signals; software and stored data; and other resources (except for the purposes of sections 125 to 127), including network elements that are not active. For fixed lines, this encompasses electrical energy in standard conducting cables or wires; electro-magnetic energy within coaxial cables, which can be treated as a kind of waveguide; or light photons for the laser light employed in fibre optics cables. The most common form of telecoms cable...

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View the related Precedents about IAAS

PRECEDENTS
Cloud Infrastructure (IaaS) Services and Support Agreement with Service Levels, Security, Data Protection and Change Control (England and Wales)

This Agreement is entered into on [ insert date ] Parties 1 [ insert supplier name ] a company registered in England and Wales whose registration number is [ insert company number ] and whose registered office is at [ insert registered office ] ( Supplier ); and 2 [ insert customer name ] a company registered in England and Wales whose registration number is [ insert company number ] and whose registered office is at [ insert registered office ] ( Customer ), (each of the Supplier and the Customer being a party, and together the Supplier and the Customer are the parties ). Background (A) The Supplier operates and administers a range of facilities and supplies a range of services, as further detailed in this Agreement, which the Customer wishes to access for itself and its Authorised Users. (B) The Customer, through its Authorised Users, will be able to access those facilities and services by engaging...

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