Kiribati is one of the most remote and least known countries on the planet. Located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, the state, consisting of 33 coral atolls, is actually “smeared” along the equator and crosses the date line. Tarawa, the capital of Kiribati, is not just the archipelago's governing center, but a symbol of incredible resilience, cultural integrity, and geographical solitude.
The world talks about islands when the topic of climate change is raised, but few people think of them as infrastructure points for hosting servers. And in vain. Because a virtual server in Kiribati is not just exotic. It's silence. This is a guarantee of uniqueness. This is a space where the digital footprint practically does not intersect with mass traffic.
Yes, there are no data centers in Kiribati in the usual sense. But there is a Southern Cross optical backbone and satellite support connecting the islands with Samoa, Fiji and Hawaii. There is Internet access via underwater cables and terrestrial radio channels. There is stability achieved not by quantity, but by isolation. Tarawa VPS is not about gigahertz and megabytes. This is about the rarity of IP, about complete isolation from “digital noise”, about the fact that no one will find you in a region where no one is looking.
A project that shouldn't “glow”: for private VPNs, APIs, crypto experiments, analytical nodes, those who test but do not want to publish.
Marketers and SEO specialists who need unique IP geolocations — where even Google Maps is concerned.
- Geo-experiments: the launch of multi-location infrastructures, where complete digital separation is important.
- Research projects that need a neutral zone — legally and digitally.
- Humanitarian organizations operating in the Pacific region and in need of local infrastructure without redirects.
- Tarawa VPS from THE.Hosting: when every line of code is worth its weight in gold
THE.Hosting is one of the few providers that have deployed equipment in this region. The servers are not located in the “nearest data center”, but in the physical territory of Kiribati, connected to a stable channel system and serviced directly. This is not a proxy, not a tunnel, not a “flag rental". This is the reality.
The GVA of Kiribati is:
- a fresh, unused IP address;
- low level of resource proximity (up to its absence);
- full root access, installation of any OS;
- isolation, stability, autonomy;
- management without delays and interventions.