In 1998, hard drives were measured in single-digit gigabytes. We set out to solve the technology problems of limited storage capacity, durability, and remote access. Our solution was among the first wave of commercial object storage implementations — the architectural pattern that would later underpin Amazon S3, Dropbox, and every cloud storage service that followed. By 2003, Verizon was white-labeling our platform and distributing it to their customers — three years before S3 launched.
That solution grew into bigVAULT Storage Technologies. Over the next 15 years, the problem evolved and we followed it. Data persistence became data infrastructure: carrier-class platforms serving millions of subscribers for Fortune 50 partners across three continents. A successful exit to a publicly traded acquirer.
The hardest data problem isn't persistence or infrastructure. Those are solved. The problem is intelligence.
Today, the data exists — in every business, in every system. But asking a simple question still requires pulling from five systems, reconciling in a spreadsheet, and making a decision you don't fully trust.
That's why we built Sovera. Not to add another AI product to the market — but to build the intelligence layer that makes the data you already have actually useful. For every business, not just the ones that can afford a data team.