Coimisiún na Meán, the DSA and AI in Ireland: a clear, fact-based explanation for Irish businesses, with osFoundry as the example and dgm as an independent partner.

dgm is an independent osFoundry implementation partner — not affiliated with osFoundry’s developer (the company OS LLC), and it has not yet completed any client integrations.

Coimisiún na Meán is Ireland’s media and online-safety regulator and the Digital Services Coordinator for the EU Digital Services Act — a role with outsized significance because so many large platforms are established in Ireland.

What it regulates

Coimisiún na Meán has been Ireland’s Digital Services Coordinator for the EU Digital Services Act (DSA) since February 2024, and it administers Ireland’s Online Safety Code (fully effective 21 July 2025) for designated video-sharing platforms. Because so many platforms are established in Ireland, the Irish DSC has outsized DSA significance, and it has opened compliance reviews of online platforms.

The AI-adjacent remit

Coimisiún na Meán is also one of the fifteen AI Act competent authorities (since 16 September 2025), responsible for AI in media and online platforms. Its DSA and Online Safety Code work already touches algorithmic recommender systems and AI-driven content moderation.

Keeping data in Ireland

osFoundry pins the data region to the United States, the EU or Japan, runs models locally on your own hardware, and supports self-hosting (BYO Cloud) on a cloud account you control. An EU region keeps data inside the EEA — and that satisfies GDPR for most businesses, because there is no Irish rule requiring personal data to physically stay in Ireland. There is, however, no dedicated managed hyperscaler region “in osFoundry” for Ireland; to keep data solely in the country the honest path is self-hosting in an Irish cloud region — Amazon Web Services has eu-west-1 (Dublin, generally available since 2007, three availability zones) and Microsoft Azure has North Europe (Dublin, Grange Castle, generally available since 2009), while Google Cloud has no Ireland region (the nearest are Belgium and London) — or running open-weight models locally. One honest nuance on capacity: Ireland lifted the de-facto data-centre connection moratorium under a stringent new regime (the CRU policy effective 12 December 2025), but EirGrid will not connect new data centres in the Greater Dublin Area until around 2028; existing AWS and Azure capacity in Dublin is operational and usable today. In financial services, cloud and ICT third-party risk is governed by DORA, supervised by the Central Bank of Ireland.

Important note

This article is general information and is not legal, tax or grant advice. Tax schemes, grants, rules and rates change, and only the relevant authorities (among them Revenue, IDA Ireland, Enterprise Ireland, the Data Protection Commission and the Central Bank of Ireland) decide eligibility and awards. dgm is not a grant deliverer, approved knowledge provider or intermediary. Always confirm the current terms with the official source or a qualified tax or legal adviser.

How dgm helps

dgm is an independent implementation partner that helps businesses in Ireland adopt osFoundry — from identifying the first practical use case, through building it, to connecting AI to the systems you already use. dgm works independently of osFoundry’s developer (the company OS LLC) and has not yet completed any client integrations; everything above is therefore a description of the service offered, not a delivered result. If you would like to look at a sensible first step, dgm is happy to think it through with you. Arrange a no-obligation conversation with dgm.