The company
Engineered sovereignty, from Québec.
Mash Compute builds Canadian-controlled, modular AI data centre bases — infrastructure that keeps compute, operations, and data on Canadian ground.
The thesis
Sovereignty is the product, not a feature.
AI compute is becoming critical infrastructure, and where it lives — and who can compel access to it — is now a legal question for regulated and public-sector buyers. We build the base, the software, and the operations so the answer is unambiguously Canadian.
Why Canadian-controlled
Built for the buyers who can't compromise on it.
Procurement eligibility
Canadian control and residency align with public-sector procurement and the eligibility that follows from it.
Program alignment
Our infrastructure fits the direction of Canada's federal Sovereign AI Compute Strategy — a market tailwind, not a funding claim.
CLOUD Act insulation
A Canadian-controlled team and supply chain structurally insulate customer data from the long-arm reach of the U.S. CLOUD Act.
Canadian team
The founding team are Canadian citizens and permanent residents — the structural basis for the sovereignty we promise.
CMS-AI-DC Technologies.
Mash Compute is the public brand; CMS-AI-DC Technologies is the legal entity behind it. CMS-AI-DC stands for Canadian Modular Sovereign AI Data Centre — exactly what we build. We're based in Québec, Canada.
Legal entity
CMS-AI-DC Technologies · Québec, Canada
Policy context
Aligned with Canada's sovereign-compute direction.
Canada's federal Sovereign AI Compute Strategy is mobilizing private-sector AI data-centre build-out and improving compute access for Canadian organizations. We reference it as market context that favours Canadian-built infrastructure — Mash Compute has not received funding under it.
Policy context only. Not a funding claim.
Pre-launch, and selecting pilots.
We don't have customers, revenue, or certifications to claim yet — and we won't pretend otherwise. What we have is a designed product, a Canadian-controlled team, and an open pilot program.