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The Data Daily

6 Privacy Solutions for Big Data and Machine Learning

6 Privacy Solutions for Big Data and Machine Learning

Travelers who wander the banana pancake trail through Southeast Asia will all get roughly the same experience. They’ll eat crummy food on one of fifty boats floating around Halong Bay, then head up to the highlands of Sapa for a faux cultural experience with hill tribes that grow dreadful cannabis. After that, it’s on to Laos to float the river in Vang Vien while smashed on opium tea. Eventually, you’ll see someone wearing a t-shirt with the classic slogan – “same same, but different.” The origins of this phrase surround the Southeast Asian vendors who often respond to queries about the authenticity of fake goods they’re selling with “same same, but different.” It’s a phrase that appropriately describes how the technology world loves to spin things as fresh and new when they’ve hardly changed at all. Look no further than startup Panoply, “a five-year-old, San Francisco-based platform that makes it easier for businesses to set up a data warehouse and analyze that data with standard SQL queries.” So, we’re back to Kimball vs. Inmon again. (Rolls eyes.) In our recent piece on 9 Technology Trends You Should Know For 2021, we talked about something that’s actually different – the notion of “privacy-enhancing computation,” which lets organizations safely share data in untrusted environments. Two technology concepts that you’ll hear used in this context are federated learning and homomorphic encryption. Artificial intelligence algorithms – or machine learning algorithms – are only as good as the big data you feed them. Companies with exclusive access to large proprietary datasets have a competitive advantage because they can extract valuable insights from that data. Now, imagine if the data you want to use falls under the growing list of global privacy and data regulations like CCPA, GDPR, HIPAA, BSA, CYA, etc. You’ll then need to convince the stiff collars in compliance that your “citizen developers” need access to it. Think about how much absolute tripe you’ll have to deal with from Mordac, The Preventer of Information Services. Often referred to as “the Holy Grail of cryptography,” homomorphic encryption makes data privacy concerns a non-issue for development teams. Says Gartner, “homomorphic encryption enables businesses to share data without compromising privacy.” Simply put, it acts like a firewall between the actual data and your developers by generating a representative data set which consists of synthetic data. While these methods have been around for a while, they’re only now becoming fast enough to be viable. Today, we’ll look at five startups working on variants of the homomorphic encryption theme. Our first startup believes their competitive advantage is speed, and their pedigree makes that very believable. Those who complain about a lack of women engineers rarely question why women’s magazines often feature celebrities who can’t speak in complete sentences instead of accomplished women like Shafi Goldwasser. She’s a computer scientist whose long list of accomplishments includes a Turing Award in 2012 for pioneering new methods for efficient verification of mathematical proofs in complexity theory. Four years later, she co-founded New Joisey startup Duality Technologies which has taken in $20 million in funding so far from investors that include Intel (INTC) and media giant Hearst. All that money is being used to build the Duality SecurePlus™ platform which encrypts sensitive data and the machine learning algorithms that learn from it. With applications in financial services, healthcare, and telecommunications, Duality landed a contract with DARPA this summer to use the platform for researching genomic susceptibility to severe COVID-19 symptoms, something they could do 30X faster than alternative solutions. They’re also working with Canada’s Scotiabank to help banks join forces to fight money laundering and financial crime by sharing information without exposing sensitive data.  Founded in 2018, San Francisco startup Datafleets has taken in $4.5 million in disclosed funding which all came in the form of a seed round that closed last week with investors that include LG Electronics and Marc Cuban. That money is being spent by some Stanford dropouts to build a platform that lets developers conduct extract-transfer-load (ETL) operations, business analytics, and machine learning without ever seeing raw row-level data. Upon connection to a dataset, DataFleets automatedly generates synthetic data that is structurally representative of the underlying plaintext. No individual’s data can be “reverse-engineered” from statistical queries or machine learning, and analytics themselves are always run on the raw data. All the typical use cases are in scope such as fraud analytics, crossing Chinese walls, try-before-you-buy data, and medical image sharing across institutions while adhering to medical privacy rules. Founded in 2018, French startup Cosmian has taken in around $1.6 million in funding from a bunch of French guys you’ve never heard of. They’ve built a platform, Cyphercompute, that encrypts confidential data such that it stays encrypted during processing and never needs to be revealed in clear text. Any company that wants to extract insights from sensitive and confidential data would be a potential client for Cosmian. Founded in 2016, Baltimore startup Enveil has taken in $15 million in disclosed funding from investors that include Bloomberg, Capital One, Thomson Reuters, and Mastercard. Enveil’s ZeroReveal® solutions protect data while it’s being used or processed, what they refer to as “data in use.” Founded by U.S. Intelligence Community alumni, they’re the only company certified to provide nation-state level security in the processing layer. The solution is market ready, scalable, and can integrate without any required changes to existing database and storage technologies. Founded in 2015, New Yawk startup has taken in $14 million in disclosed funding from investors that include JP Morgan Chase, the lead investor in their last round, a Series A of $10 million raised about two years ago. Some of the world’s largest financial services, technology, and manufacturing companies are using Inpher’s Secret Computing platform for a variety of use cases, many of which the company details on their website. One good example in healthcare is enabling clinical trials researchers with secure access to distributed, private electronic health record (EHR) repositories for improved patient selection and matching while maintaining privacy and compliance. Today, customers are using Secret Computing® to better detect financial fraud, aggregate model features across private datasets, better predict heart disease, and much more. Last but not least is a startup that offered the first commercially available runtime encryption back in 2017 using Intel® SGX (a set of security-related instruction codes that are built into some modern Intel central processing units). Founded in 2016, Silicon Valley startup Fortanix has taken in $31 million in funding from investors that include Intel whose technology they’re using to provide a hardware foundation that encrypts sensitive data as it’s being processed. The company provides solutions for confidential computing, encryption, key management, secrets management, tokenization, and hardware security modules. They’ve partnered with VMware to enable cloud service providers to deliver data security as a service, and also appear to be sidling up to Microsoft as well. The six startups we’ve discussed in today’s article are hardly the only companies working on data privacy solutions for big data and machine learning. Large companies like IBM (IBM) are dabbling in this too, and it was IBM scientist Craig Gentry who first created a working instance of homomorphic encryption. We’ve learned not to expect much from IBM, but homomorphic encryption sounds like the perfect solution for securing a hybrid cloud environment. The real value in homomorphic encryption is that it unlocks value in all the datasets that were previously inaccessible due to data privacy reasons. It also helps many the CTO sleep well at night with the understanding that there are far fewer ways for a data breach to happen, the ultimate CLM for a CTO. Soon, it may just become the de facto standard for ensuring sensitive data is sufficiently protected. Pure-play disruptive tech stocks are not only hard to find, but investing in them is risky business. That's why we created “The Nanalyze Disruptive Tech Portfolio Report,” which lists 20 disruptive tech stocks we love so much we’ve invested in them ourselves. Find out which tech stocks we love, like, and avoid in this special report, now available for all Nanalyze Premium annual subscribers.

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