设为首页加入收藏
  • 首页
  • Start up
  • 当前位置:首页 >Start up >【】

    【】

    发布时间:2025-09-15 10:42:59 来源:都市天下脉观察 作者:Start up

    Latest

    AI

    Amazon

    Apps

    Biotech & Health

    Climate

    Cloud Computing

    Commerce

    Crypto

    Enterprise

    EVs

    Fintech

    Fundraising

    Gadgets

    Gaming

    Google

    Government & Policy

    Hardware

    Instagram

    Layoffs

    Media & Entertainment

    Meta

    Microsoft

    Privacy

    Robotics

    Security

    Social

    Space

    Startups

    TikTok

    Transportation

    Venture

    More from TechCrunch

    Staff

    Events

    Startup Battlefield

    StrictlyVC

    Newsletters

    Podcasts

    Videos

    Partner Content

    TechCrunch Brand Studio

    Crunchboard

    Contact Us

    Jonathan Mortensen, CEO/founder of Confident Security
    Image Credits:Confident Security
    AI

    Confident Security, ‘the Signal for AI,’ comes out of stealth with $4.2M

    Rebecca Bellan 8:00 AM PDT · July 17, 2025

    As consumers, businesses, and governments flock to the promise of cheap, fast, and seemingly magical AI tools, one question keeps getting in the way: How do I keep my data private?

    Tech giants like OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, Google, and others are quietly scooping up and retaining user data to improve their models or monitor for safety and security, even in some enterprise contexts where companies assume their information is off limits. For highly regulated industries or companies building on the frontier, that gray area could be a dealbreaker. Fears about where data goes, who can see it, and how it might be used are slowing AI adoption in sectors like healthcare, finance, and government. 

    Enter San Francisco-based startup Confident Security, which aims to be “the Signal for AI.” The company’s product, CONFSEC, is an end-to-end encryption tool that wraps around foundational models, guaranteeing that prompts and metadata can’t be stored, seen, or used for AI training, even by the model provider or any third party.

    “The second that you give up your data to someone else, you’ve essentially reduced your privacy,” Jonathan Mortensen, founder and CEO of Confident Security, told TechCrunch. “And our product’s goal is to remove that trade-off.”

    Confident Security came out of stealth on Thursday with $4.2 million in seed funding from Decibel, South Park Commons, Ex Ante, and Swyx, TechCrunch has exclusively learned. The company wants to serve as an intermediary vendor between AI vendors and their customers — like hyperscalers, governments, and enterprises.

    Even AI companies could see the value in offering Confident Security’s tool to enterprise clients as a way to unlock that market, said Mortensen. He added that CONFSEC is also well-suited for new AI browsers hitting the market, like Perplexity’s recently released Comet, to give customers guarantees that their sensitive data isn’t being stored on a server somewhere that the company or bad actors could access, or that their work-related prompts aren’t being used to “train AI to do your job.”

    CONFSEC is modeled after Apple’s Private Cloud Compute (PCC) architecture, which Mortensen says “is 10x better than anything out there in terms of guaranteeing that Apple cannot see your data” when it runs certain AI tasks securely in the cloud.

    Techcrunch event

    Join 10k+ tech and VC leaders for growth and connections at Disrupt 2025

    Netflix, Box, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech. Grab your ticket before Sept 26 to save up to $668.

    Join 10k+ tech and VC leaders for growth and connections at Disrupt 2025

    Netflix, Box, a16z, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just some of the 250+ heavy hitters leading 200+ sessions designed to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech. Grab your ticket before Sept 26 to save up to $668.

    San Francisco | October 27-29, 2025 REGISTER NOW

    Like Apple’s PCC, Confident Security’s system works by first anonymizing data by encrypting and routing it through services like Cloudflare or Fastly, so servers never see the original source or content. Next, it uses advanced encryption that only allows decryption under strict conditions.

    “So you can say you’re only allowed to decrypt this if you are not going to log the data, and you’re not going to use it for training, and you’re not going to let anyone see it,” Mortensen said. 

    Finally, the software running the AI inference is publicly logged and open to review so that experts can verify its guarantees. 

    “Confident Security is ahead of the curve in recognizing that the future of AI depends on trust built into the infrastructure itself,” Jess Leão, partner at Decibel, said in a statement. “Without solutions like this, many enterprises simply can’t move forward with AI.”

    It’s still early days for the year-old company, but Mortensen said CONFSEC has been tested, externally audited, and is production-ready. The team is in talks with banks, browsers, and search engines, among other potential clients, to add CONFSEC to their infrastructure stacks. 

    “You bring the AI, we bring the privacy,” said Mortensen.

    • 上一篇:Jasper's robots assemble fresh meals for nearby apartment dwellers
    • 下一篇:Bollywood star Deepika Padukone's skincare startup attracts VC backing

      相关文章

      • How to respond when a VC asks about your startup’s valuation
      • Accel rethinks early
      • When your cap table makes your startup uninvestable
      • Gitai's autonomous robot installs panel outside the ISS, showing orbital repairs in action
      • 2023 will bring crisper methods for evaluating startup success
      • TigerEye founders build on prior startup experience to create business simulation tool
      • Two former CloudKitchens execs are tackling Mexico's solar power lag
      • FlowFi takes in first funding to give founders insight into financials
      • How to obtain FDA buy
      • Only 7 days left to save $1,000 on Disrupt passes

        随便看看

      • Momento launches out of stealth with a serverless cache
      • Musical toy startup Playtime Engineering wants to simplify electronic music making for kids
      • Interior design startup Havenly acquires home décor retailer The Citizenry
      • Loora wants to leverage AI to teach English
      • South Park creators' deepfake video startup Deep Voodoo conjures $20M in new funding
      • Fireworks.ai open source API puts generative AI in reach of any developer
      • FlowFi takes in first funding to give founders insight into financials
      • Act fast — just 3 days remain to grab your TechCrunch Early Stage 2024 tickets
      • Hack The Box, a gamified cybersecurity training platform with 1.7M users, raises $55M
      • VCs double down on fintech Coast, which aims to be the Brex for 'real
      • Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【】,都市天下脉观察   辽ICP备198741324484号sitemap