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Trusted Tech Alliance led by Microsoft and Ericsson sets five principles for digital trust
Summary
Fifteen global tech companies, led by Microsoft and Ericsson, launched the Trusted Tech Alliance on Feb. 13 with five principles covering governance, ethics, secure development, supply-chain security standards and support for an open digital environment.
Content
Fifteen global technology companies announced the launch of the Trusted Tech Alliance on Feb. 13, led by Microsoft and Ericsson. The group framed the alliance around five principles intended to support safe use of technology regardless of where it is developed. Organisers presented the move against a backdrop of growing focus on digital sovereignty, with governments weighing new rules and domestic strategies about where data and services are located. Company leaders said they began discussing the alliance in mid-2025 and are aiming to set a common standard for trust in technology.
Key facts:
- The alliance comprises 15 companies and is led by Microsoft and Ericsson.
- Its five principles call for strong corporate governance, ethical conduct, secure technology development, adherence to global security standards across supply chains, and support for an open digital environment.
- Members operate across connectivity, cloud infrastructure, semiconductors, software, and artificial intelligence.
- Named participants include Anthropic, Amazon Web Services, Alphabet's Google, Reliance Jio Platforms, Nokia, Cohere, NTT and SAP.
- Companies joining the alliance will self-attest to the principles, and the framework includes provisions for independent assessments.
Summary:
The alliance aims to present a common industry approach that could act as a counterweight to trends toward separate national technology rules and heightened focus on digital sovereignty. Members will self-attest to the five principles and provide for independent assessments. Undetermined at this time.
