Nigerian AI models: N-ATLaS and the options: a clear, fact-based explanation for organisations in Nigeria — with osFoundry as the example and dgm as an independent partner.

dgm is an independent integration partner for osFoundry — it is not affiliated with the maker of osFoundry (OS LLC) and has not yet completed any integration project for a client.

osFoundry is a model-agnostic AI orchestration platform built on the bring-your-own-key (BYOK) principle: usage-based pricing with no per-user fee, local-first operation, and the option to self-host, with a choice of data region (the United States, the European Union or Japan) or running it in your own private cloud.

Models for Nigerian languages

Nigeria does not have a production-ready, sovereign large language model. There is a real, downloadable government-backed effort — N-ATLaS, released in September 2025 by Awarri with NITDA and NCAIR, covering Yoruba, Hausa, Igbo and Nigerian-accented English — but its text model is a fine-tune of Meta’s Llama-3 8B released under a custom licence that caps commercial use at around 1,000 end users, so we treat it as context rather than a drop-in commercial model. Lelapa AI’s InkubaLM, which also covers Nigerian languages, is published under a non-commercial CC BY-NC licence. For a commercial deployment, the credible sovereign option is to run permissively licensed open-weight models you can self-host — Mistral (Paris; its Mistral 3 family is under the Apache-2.0 licence) and Llama (open-weight, under Meta’s community licence) — through BYOK. Because osFoundry is model-agnostic, you can compose any of these as a model layer under the platform: that is orchestration, not a head-to-head contest between two platforms.

How you use them

osFoundry lets you pin your data region to the United States, the European Union or Japan, supports local-first inference on your own device, and lets you self-host it in your own AWS, Azure or Google Cloud account (BYO Cloud). For a Nigerian business, the honest position is that no major cloud provider runs a full region inside Nigeria — AWS’s nearest region is Cape Town (af-south-1), Azure and Oracle are nearest in Johannesburg, and Google Cloud has no African region at all — so a managed region means your data sits outside the country. If you want data on Nigerian soil, you can self-host in a Nigerian data centre such as Equinix (formerly MainOne) or Rack Centre in Lagos, or run local-first. Remember that the real question is jurisdiction, not just geography: the United States CLOUD Act can compel a US-owned provider to hand over data it controls wherever it is physically stored, so self-hosting or running local-first is what removes that exposure for your most sensitive work.

Where osFoundry fits in

osFoundry is a model-agnostic platform, priced by usage, that your teams can use to put the ideas in this article into practice — building assistants, agents and applications on your own data. dgm helps you independently take the first step.

Where dgm fits in

dgm is an independent integration partner that helps organisations in Nigeria adopt the osFoundry platform — from identifying the first practical use case, to configuration, to connecting AI to the systems you already run. dgm works separately from the maker of osFoundry (OS LLC) and has not yet completed an integration project for any client, so everything described above is a proposed service, not a delivered result. If you would like to weigh a practical first step, dgm is glad to look at it with you. Book an introductory call with dgm.