Confidential AI Protects Data and Models Across Clouds
Confidential AI integrates zero trust and confidential computing to guard data and models during inferencing, training, learning, and fine-tuning.
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Background for this topic.
A fine is a monetary penalty imposed by a competent authority or court for violating a law, regulation, or legally binding requirement. In information security and privacy, it may follow inadequate safeguards for personal data, unlawful processing, failure to meet required reporting or record-keeping duties, or non-compliance with sector-specific controls. The legal basis, maximum amount, and factors such as severity, duration, negligence, cooperation, and remediation vary by jurisdiction; a fine is generally punitive rather than compensation for affected parties.
For security practitioners, a fine signals that controls and security decisions may be examined as evidence of compliance. Maintain documented risk assessments, access reviews, patching decisions, supplier oversight, logging, and retention practices, especially where they protect regulated data. During an incident, preserve relevant records and establish an accurate timeline for containment, notification, and remediation. Privacy requirements such as data minimization and retention limits can therefore be security controls as well as legal obligations. A fine does not by itself establish that a particular attack or breach occurred.
Confidential AI integrates zero trust and confidential computing to guard data and models during inferencing, training, learning, and fine-tuning.
UK privacy regulator, the information commissioner, says illegal use of AI will be punished with fines
Incident That Affected 35,000 Urgent Care Clinic Patients Results in $480K FineWeeks after the Department of Health and Human Services announced its first HIPAA enforcement action in a ransomware breach, federal regulators have reached another milestone: a $480,000 settlement in a HIPAA case centered for the first time ever on a phishing attack.
Legal experts claim that landmark ECJ ruling will make it easier for authorities to sanction organizations infringing the GDPR