Sam Kirkman is Director of Services for EMEA, writing in The AI Journal and examines why AI vendor insolvency should be treated as a core cybersecurity risk, not just a commercial concern. Read the preview below or view it online.

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AI adoption has surged ahead of regulation. Across industries, organisations are embedding third-party AI tools into security operations, customer systems, and decision-making engines. Yet few Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) have considered a quietly growing complication: what happens if your AI provider goes bankrupt?  

The risk is not hypothetical. Many AI vendors are heavily venture-capital funded and operating at a loss. As market pressures tighten, some will fail. When that happens, they don’t just leave customers stranded, they leave them exposed. The collapse of an AI provider can quickly become a serious cybersecurity crisis.

Data on the auction block  

In bankruptcy proceedings, everything has a price tag, including your data. Any information shared with a vendor, from logs to fine-tuned datasets, may be treated as an asset that can be sold to pay creditors. The implications are rough to say the least: customer data, proprietary telemetry, and even model training materials could end up in the hands of an unknown buyer.  

You can read the full article here.

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