The data rate of your orbital constellation is paltry compared to the typical terrestrial exchange 3 terabit/s speeds, and you also anticipate a potential market timing issue - currently, the market for datacentres overall is exuberant because of ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE HYPE, but there could be near term oversupply (even if all capacity ultimately will be filled over decades) and with the impending de-orbit of the International Space Station, a lot of mission bandwidth will soon be freed, awaiting demand from private commercial space users. If some form of economic shock or downturn arose, your datacentre might be left underutilised... given the high capex cost and tight payback period, you need the datacentre to be filled to earn back ROI as soon as possible, or there could be an asset revaluation or WRITEDOWN...
There are also a few other choices - where did the inaugural launch of the ORBITAL DATACENTRE constellation occur?
>Indonesia: >Biak Island / West Papua (this is my default)>Morotai >Enggano-Benkulu>China (or other location, see list here)>>6313592As you own this datacentre, you also contemplate the ultimate consequences of increased space-cyber surveillance upon society. Previously, it was unfeasible to track from orbit every individual on the planet, with this capability only reserved for intelligence agencies against High Value Targets and nation-state threats - however, your orbital datacentre, with the bulk of use being furnished by terrestrial imaging, data processing in realtime, eg synthetic aperture radar generating data at 10 Gigabytes per second - soon it will be possible to implement an ORBITAL PANOPTICON. What approach do you take to safeguard your customer data?
>Literally bulk trawl surveillance. You can be like those NSA Tailored Access Operations, store and archive and intercept and keep EVERYTHING (hopefully there will be SPACE NUDES??)>Don't perform bulk surveillance - it wastes valuable space storage with disturbing 4chan anime catgirls - nobody wants to see that! But enable some selectors - if the need ever arose, you might be able to search through some very recent cached activity and data traffic only>You enable differential privacy and k-anonymity, using algorithms to inject calibrated noise such that individuals cannot be identified, but statistical aggregate disclosures can still be reported and analysed>Comply with national authority data handover requests and law enforcement, but otherwise do not keep anything>Data privacy and user trust is sacrosanct; you will never spy, eavesdrop, intercept or violate your user data integrity in any manner whatsoever. You open source the code of your data architectures for anyone to inspect, verify, test and replicate and provide bug bounties to encourage vulnerability reporting. When a user deletes their data, you eject their storage to burn up in space