Sovereign Digital Infrastructure for European Nations
Origin 22 LLC — 44s Lock-Free Compute Platform
March 2026
On March 3, 2026, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps declared the Strait of Hormuz closed. 17 submarine cables carrying 30% of global internet traffic entered an active war zone. Three AWS data centers have been struck by drones. Multiple cables have declared force majeure. All commercial cable repair operations are suspended.
In September 2022, underwater explosions destroyed 3 of 4 Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea. That single act of infrastructure sabotage cost Germany its primary energy supply, triggered a continent-wide energy crisis, caused €billions in industrial damage, and fundamentally altered European security posture.
What is happening now in the Gulf is Nord Stream, but for the internet — and for the remaining energy supply.
Energy (again): Qatar declared force majeure on LNG contracts to Italy and Belgium. Gulf LNG supplies 20-30% of European electricity. With Russian gas already cut off and Gulf LNG now disrupted, Europe faces its second energy crisis in 4 years — and this time, the alternatives are even fewer.
Digital connectivity to Asia and Middle East: The submarine cables transiting the Suez Canal, Red Sea, and Gulf are Europe's primary data routes to Asia. These same routes carry:
Europe cannot afford to lose its undersea digital infrastructure the way it lost its undersea gas infrastructure.
Every proposed solution requires years:
| Solution | Cost | Timeline | Problem |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rebuild submarine cables | $2-5B/route | 3-5 years | Same war zone |
| Overland alternatives (SilkLink, WorldLink) | $3-5B | 2028-2030 | Iraq/Syria routes also unstable |
| Harden data centers | $1-2B/country | 12-18 months | Not defensible against state actors |
| Satellite (Starlink/Kuiper) | $5-10B+ | Limited bandwidth | Foreign nation controls the switch |
| Wait for the war to end | Incalculable | Unknown | Cables could be cut tomorrow |
No existing solution can restore digital economic capacity in less than 2 years.
Every day without a solution, European nations face:
Origin 22's 44s platform is a lock-free compute architecture that eliminates dependency on centralized data centers, submarine cables, and GPU hardware.
All existing cloud infrastructure — AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, Redis, PostgreSQL — uses mutex-based synchronization. When multiple processes access shared data, they take turns waiting for locks. Under high load, this creates cascading contention that degrades performance exponentially and requires massive hardware to compensate.
44s replaces every mutex lock with CPU-native atomic operations over proprietary, patented data structures. No thread ever waits for another. Performance scales linearly with cores. The result: equivalent workloads run on a fraction of the hardware, at a fraction of the power.
| Metric | Traditional | 44s | Speedup |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cache (vs Redis) — Redis is single-threaded; 44s uses all 128 threads | 78K ops/sec | 149M ops/sec | 1,910x |
| AI inference KV cache | 49,870ms at 128 threads | 46ms at 128 threads | 1,078x |
| Database (vs PostgreSQL) | 50K ops/sec | 14.77M ops/sec | 295x |
| Queue (vs RabbitMQ) | 50K msg/sec | 6.79M msg/sec | 136x |
| Cold start (vs AWS Lambda) | ~200ms | ~5µs | 40,000x |
| Power (equivalent workload) | 50-500kW | 360W - 3.6kW | 140x less |
Benchmarked January 30, 2026 on AWS c6i.metal (128 vCPU, 128 threads). Publicly verifiable: github.com/Ghost-Flow/44s-benchmark.
Runs on commodity hardware already deployed worldwide. 44s runs on standard x86 processors — Intel, AMD — that exist in every office, every government building, every university, every server closet in every country on earth. There are billions of these processors already deployed. No new hardware procurement. No shipping through a war zone. No 18-month construction timeline.
No GPU dependency. AI inference, the fastest-growing compute workload globally, runs on commodity CPUs under 44s. No $40,000 Nvidia chips. No TSMC supply chain dependency. No export control vulnerability.
140x less power. A workload that requires a gigawatt data center on traditional infrastructure requires 7 megawatts on 44s. That's the difference between needing a dedicated power plant and running on existing municipal power. No water crisis. No grid stress. No LNG dependency for cooling.
Edge-native architecture. Because 44s runs on minimal hardware at minimal power, it can deploy at the network edge — in every city, every government office, every enterprise facility. There is no centralized facility to target. There is no single cable to cut. The compute is everywhere the users are.
Redis protocol compatible. Existing applications that speak to Redis — which is most enterprise software — can switch their connection to 44s by changing a single configuration line. No application rewrite. No migration project. No months of integration work.
| Phase | Timeline | Deliverable |
|---|---|---|
| Initial deployment | 48-72 hours | 44s running on existing government/enterprise servers |
| National rollout | 2-4 weeks | Edge nodes across major cities, government networks, critical infrastructure |
| Full sovereign platform | 60-90 days | Complete 27-service cloud replacement, AI inference, full vertical integration |
Compare to every alternative: 2-5 years.
Europe has already lived through one undersea infrastructure catastrophe. The economic consequences of a second are compounding:
| Exposure | Scale |
|---|---|
| EU-Asia trade dependent on digital infrastructure | $2.5T+ annually |
| European cloud workloads routed through Gulf cables | Hundreds of millions of enterprise users |
| Financial services connectivity (London/Frankfurt/Zurich to Asia) | Trillions in daily transaction volume |
| LNG supply disruption (Qatar force majeure) | 20-30% of European electricity |
| Industrial operations dependent on Asia-Europe data routes | Automotive, manufacturing, logistics supply chains |
| European hyperscaler dependency | 72%+ of EU cloud runs on US providers routing through vulnerable cables |
The EU's own digital sovereignty agenda — GAIA-X, the Data Act, the AI Act — becomes irrelevant if the physical infrastructure connecting Europe to its trade partners can be destroyed by a single state actor. Europe spent €billions responding to Nord Stream. The cost of responding to a Gulf cable severance without preparation will be orders of magnitude higher because every digital service, not just one energy source, is affected simultaneously.
44s doesn't fix submarine cables or reopen the Strait of Hormuz. What it does:
44s is offered as a national sovereign infrastructure license, not a SaaS subscription. The nation owns the deployment. The nation controls the data. There is no foreign kill switch.
| Component | Description |
|---|---|
| National Platform License | Perpetual sovereign license for the full 44s platform (27 cloud services, AI inference, enterprise computing) |
| Deployment Services | Origin 22 engineering team deploys across existing national hardware infrastructure |
| Knowledge Transfer | Full training program for national engineering teams to operate, maintain, and extend the platform |
| Annual Support & Updates | Ongoing platform updates, security patches, performance improvements |
| Custom Vertical Integration | Energy, financial, healthcare, logistics, AI verticals tailored to national requirements |
Pricing is structured as sovereign infrastructure investment, commensurate with the economic output protected and the absence of alternatives during the crisis window.
In September 2022, underwater explosions destroyed 3 of 4 Nord Stream gas pipelines in the Baltic Sea, cutting Germany's primary Russian gas supply. The attack demonstrated that state actors will destroy undersea critical infrastructure to achieve strategic objectives.
Since Nord Stream:
Iran has:
The probability of actual cable severance is not theoretical. It is a stated threat, backed by demonstrated capability, from an actor currently striking every other category of Gulf infrastructure. The question is not whether Iran can cut the cables. It is whether anyone is prepared when they do.
Founded: Origin 22 LLC
Founder: Zachary Kent Reynolds
Architecture: 44s Lock-Free Compute Platform
IP: Broad provisional patent portfolio covering lock-free computing, AI inference, distributed systems, and related technologies
Government Engagement:
Platform Components (27 Services):
| Category | Services |
|---|---|
| Compute | Serverless, Containers, Gateway, Build Cache, Load Balancer, DNS, Registry |
| Data | Cache (1,910x Redis), Database (295x PostgreSQL), Object Store, Vector, Graph, Search, Timeseries, Warehouse |
| Messaging | Task Queue, Pub/Sub, Streaming, ETL, Logging, Metrics, Tracing |
| Security | Secrets, Auth, RBAC, mTLS, Post-Quantum Cryptography |
| AI/ML | Inference (1,078x GPU), ML Training, Vector DB |
Every day without sovereign digital infrastructure is a day of economic output lost, competitive position surrendered, and vulnerability to cable severance unaddressed.
The overland cables are 2028-2030. The data centers take 12-18 months to harden. The war has no end date. The cables could be cut tomorrow.
44s deploys in days on hardware you already own.
There is no other option that works right now.
Contact:
Zachary Kent Reynolds
Origin 22 LLC
zach@origin22.com
Per chaos ad astra.