<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>Salient Security Solutions</title><description>Founder &amp; Principal Consultant, Salient Security Solutions — 20+ years securing regulated industries — banking, healthcare, retail, energy — now helping security and transformation leaders adopt AI quickly and defensibly. CISSP, CCSP, CPA.</description><link>https://salientsecurity.com/</link><language>en-gb</language><atom:link href="https://salientsecurity.com/rss.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>AI Governance in Regulated Industries: Where to Start</title><link>https://salientsecurity.com/resources/seed-ai-governance/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://salientsecurity.com/resources/seed-ai-governance/</guid><description>Most organizations know AI governance matters but few know where to begin. Here are the first three questions every CISO should answer before scaling AI.</description><pubDate>Wed, 15 Jan 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded>&lt;p&gt;If you lead security at a regulated organization, you have probably already had
the conversation: leadership wants to move faster on AI, and someone in the room
asks who is making sure it is safe. The honest answer, at most companies, is &lt;em&gt;no
one in particular&lt;/em&gt; — not because people are careless, but because AI adoption has
outrun the governance structures built for traditional software.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;You do not fix that with a 60-page policy. You fix it by answering a few concrete
questions in order. Here are the three I start with on every engagement.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2 id=&quot;1-what-ai-systems-are-already-running&quot;&gt;1. What AI systems are already running?&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;“Shadow AI” — staff using consumer tools without IT visibility — is now the norm,
not the exception. People paste contract language into a chatbot to summarize it,
or wire a department spreadsheet into an AI add-on, long before any policy catches
up. Before you can govern AI, you need an honest inventory of what is actually in
use: sanctioned tools, embedded vendor features, and the unsanctioned ones too.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The gap between what an organization &lt;em&gt;thinks&lt;/em&gt; is happening with AI and what is
&lt;em&gt;actually&lt;/em&gt; happening is the core governance problem. Close that gap first.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2 id=&quot;2-what-data-are-those-systems-touching&quot;&gt;2. What data are those systems touching?&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;An AI tool working with de-identified, low-sensitivity data carries a fundamentally
different risk profile than one with access to PHI, cardholder data, or proprietary
research. The same model, pointed at different data, is a different decision.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Map the data flows: what goes in, where it is processed, whether it is used for
training, and where the output lands. In regulated environments this is also where
most of the real exposure hides — not in the model itself, but in the permissions
and data paths around it. (A retrieval assistant does not create new access; it
surfaces access that already existed, which is why an honest data-flow map so often
turns up years of accumulated permission debt.)&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2 id=&quot;3-which-regulatory-frameworks-actually-apply&quot;&gt;3. Which regulatory frameworks actually apply?&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The EU AI Act, the NIST AI Risk Management Framework, ISO/IEC 42001, and
sector-specific guidance — OCC expectations for banks, OCR considerations for
healthcare, PCI DSS where payments are involved — do not impose identical
requirements. Knowing which apply to &lt;em&gt;your&lt;/em&gt; use cases shapes everything downstream:
which systems need formal review, what evidence you must retain, and what you can
defend to a regulator or your board.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;You do not need to implement all of them. You need to know which ones you are on
the hook for, and be able to show your work.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;h2 id=&quot;start-small-scale-deliberately&quot;&gt;Start small, scale deliberately&lt;/h2&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A governance program does not have to arrive fully formed. The organizations that
succeed start with a limited-scope assessment of their highest-risk AI use cases,
stand up a lightweight review path for new ones, and expand from there — rather than
attempting a boil-the-ocean audit that stalls before it ships anything.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The goal is not to slow AI adoption down. It is to make adoption &lt;em&gt;defensible&lt;/em&gt;, so
the business can move quickly and still answer the question in the room: who is
making sure this is safe?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;If you would like to talk through where your organization stands on these three
questions, &lt;a href=&quot;/contact/#book&quot;&gt;book a discovery call&lt;/a&gt; — it is a 30-minute conversation,
no obligation.&lt;/p&gt;</content:encoded><category>ai-governance</category><category>ciso</category><category>compliance</category><category>getting-started</category></item></channel></rss>