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Microsoft and partners launch Trusted Tech Alliance to address data sovereignty concerns
Summary
Microsoft and Ericsson announced the Trusted Tech Alliance at the Munich Security Conference, bringing together 15 companies to promote a 'trusted technology stack' and five core principles amid rising data sovereignty concerns.
Content
Microsoft and Ericsson announced the Trusted Tech Alliance at the Munich Security Conference. The alliance brings together 15 technology firms to promote what it calls a "trusted technology stack" across connectivity, cloud infrastructure, semiconductors, software and AI. The launch comes amid growing data sovereignty concerns in Europe and Asia and discussion about reliance on US-based tech providers. The alliance sets out five core principles for participating companies.
Key details:
- The launch was led by Microsoft and Ericsson and was announced at the Munich Security Conference.
- The alliance includes 15 companies: Anthropic, AWS, Cassava Technologies, Cohere, Ericsson, Google Cloud, Hanwha, Jio Platforms, Microsoft, Nokia, Nscale, NTT, Rapidus, Saab and SAP.
- The group aims to promote a trusted technology stack across connectivity, cloud infrastructure, semiconductors, software and AI.
- The announcement lists five core principles: transparent corporate governance and ethical conduct; operational transparency, secure development and independent assessment; robust supply chain and security oversight; an open, cooperative, inclusive and resilient digital ecosystem; and respect for the rule of law and data protection.
- The alliance has not yet detailed its next stages or the verification process for ensuring compliance.
Summary:
The Trusted Tech Alliance brings several large technology firms together to put shared principles and transparency commitments on record amid data sovereignty debates. Undetermined at this time.
