Question 791 of 1,000
Trust and security with Google CloudmediumMultiple ChoiceObjective-mapped

Google Cloud Data Sovereignty in the EU

This GCDL practice question tests your understanding of trust and security with google cloud. The scenario asks you to isolate a root cause — eliminate options that address a different problem before choosing. After answering, compare your reasoning against the explanation and wrong-answer breakdown below. Once you have made your selection, read the full explanation to reinforce the concept and understand why each distractor is designed to mislead on exam day.

A company uses Google Cloud and has a compliance requirement to store certain data only within the European Union and ensure it cannot be accessed from outside the EU, even by Google operations personnel. Which Google Cloud offering specifically addresses this level of data sovereignty?

Quick Answer

The correct answer is Sovereign Controls offerings, such as T-Systems Sovereign Cloud, or Assured Workloads configured with data residency and personnel access controls. These solutions are purpose-built for Google Cloud data sovereignty in the EU because they enforce both geographic data storage within the European Union and strict restrictions preventing Google operations personnel from accessing the data, addressing the highest tier of compliance under frameworks like GDPR. On the Google Cloud Digital Leader exam, this tests your understanding of how sovereignty goes beyond simple data residency—it requires operational control separation, not just where the data sits. A common trap is confusing standard data residency options, which only guarantee location, with these advanced controls that block internal access. Memory tip: think “Sovereign = Separate control,” meaning the cloud provider itself is locked out, not just the data locked in a region.

Answer choices

Why each option matters

Answer the question above first, then reveal the full breakdown to understand why each option is right or wrong.

Correct answer & explanation

Sovereign Controls offerings (e.g., T-Systems Sovereign Cloud) or Assured Workloads with data residency and personnel access controls.

Option B is correct because Sovereign Controls offerings (such as T-Systems Sovereign Cloud) and Assured Workloads with data residency and personnel access controls are specifically designed to meet strict data sovereignty requirements. These solutions ensure that data remains within the EU and that Google operations personnel cannot access it, addressing both geographic storage and access restrictions mandated by compliance frameworks like GDPR.

Key principle: Answer the scenario, not the keyword: identify the specific constraint before choosing the most familiar-sounding option.

Answer analysis

Option-by-option breakdown

For each option: why learners choose it and why it is or isn't the right answer here.

  • Selecting EU regions for all resources in the Cloud Console.

    Why it's wrong here

    Region selection keeps data at rest in EU regions but doesn't restrict Google operations personnel access or provide contractual sovereignty guarantees beyond standard terms.

  • Sovereign Controls offerings (e.g., T-Systems Sovereign Cloud) or Assured Workloads with data residency and personnel access controls.

    Why this is correct

    Sovereign Controls provide the strictest sovereignty: EU-only data residency enforced contractually, local support operations model restricting Google personnel access, and audit controls — meeting the highest regulatory standards.

    Related concept

    Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.

  • VPC Service Controls — they prevent data from leaving the VPC boundary.

    Why it's wrong here

    VPC Service Controls prevent data exfiltration between GCP services/projects. They don't restrict Google operations personnel access or provide the contractual sovereignty guarantees required.

  • Cloud Armor — it blocks requests originating from outside the EU.

    Why it's wrong here

    Cloud Armor can restrict traffic sources to EU IP ranges but doesn't address data storage location, Google personnel access restrictions, or data sovereignty contractual requirements.

Common exam traps

Common exam trap: answer the scenario, not the keyword

The trap here is that candidates often confuse geographic storage (selecting EU regions) with full data sovereignty, failing to realize that personnel access controls are required to prevent internal Google staff from accessing data from outside the EU.

Detailed technical explanation

How to think about this question

Sovereign Controls offerings, such as T-Systems Sovereign Cloud, operate by deploying Google Cloud infrastructure on dedicated hardware managed by a local partner, ensuring that Google personnel have no access to the control plane or data plane. Assured Workloads with data residency and personnel access controls use key management and access approval workflows to enforce that only authorized EU-based personnel can access data, leveraging Customer-Managed Encryption Keys (CMEK) and Access Transparency logs to audit all access attempts. In practice, this means that even if a support engineer in the US attempts to access the data, the request is denied by policy and logged for compliance review.

KKey Concepts to Remember

  • Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.
  • Find the constraint that changes the correct option.
  • Eliminate answers that are true in general but not in this case.

TExam Day Tips

  • Watch for words such as best, first, most likely and least administrative effort.
  • Review why wrong options are wrong, not only why the correct option is correct.

Key takeaway

Answer the scenario, not the keyword: identify the specific constraint before choosing the most familiar-sounding option.

Real-world example

How this comes up in practice

A media company stores terabytes of video archives that are accessed once a year for audit purposes. Moving these objects to a cold storage tier (Azure Archive, S3 Glacier, or Google Nearline) costs a fraction of hot storage. Questions like this test whether you understand storage tiers, access frequency tradeoffs, and retrieval latency requirements.

What to study next

Got this wrong? Here's your next step.

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FAQ

Questions learners often ask

What does this GCDL question test?

Trust and security with Google Cloud — This question tests Trust and security with Google Cloud — Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer..

What is the correct answer to this question?

The correct answer is: Sovereign Controls offerings (e.g., T-Systems Sovereign Cloud) or Assured Workloads with data residency and personnel access controls. — Option B is correct because Sovereign Controls offerings (such as T-Systems Sovereign Cloud) and Assured Workloads with data residency and personnel access controls are specifically designed to meet strict data sovereignty requirements. These solutions ensure that data remains within the EU and that Google operations personnel cannot access it, addressing both geographic storage and access restrictions mandated by compliance frameworks like GDPR.

What should I do if I get this GCDL question wrong?

Identify which exam domain this question belongs to, review the core concept, then practise similar questions from the same domain.

What is the key concept behind this question?

Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.

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Last reviewed: Jun 11, 2026

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This GCDL practice question is part of Courseiva's free Google Cloud certification practice question bank. Courseiva provides original exam-style practice questions with explanations, topic-based practice, mock exams, readiness tracking, and study analytics to help learners prepare for the GCDL exam.