Tech Giants Form Open Source AI Security Group

Google, Microsoft, Amazon, OpenAI and others have formed a new industry group aimed at promoting AI safety and security standards.

The Coalition for Secure AI (CoSAI) launched on Thursday as a self-described "open source initiative designed to give all practitioners and developers the guidance and tools they need to create Secure-by Design AI systems."

"Founding Premier Sponsors" of CoSAI include Microsoft, Nvidia, Google, IBM, Intel, and PayPal. Listed as "additional" founding members are OpenAI, Anthropic, Amazon, Cisco, Cohere, Chainguard, GenLab, and Wiz.

A Technical Steering Committee of AI experts from academia and industry will oversee the group's work.

The primary mission of CoSAI is to "develop comprehensive security measures that address AI systems' classical and unique risks." This is difficult to do in the current AI landscape, the group argues, because existing efforts to establish AI security standards are fragmented, uncoordinated, and inconsistently applied.

Though it recognizes those efforts and plans to collaborate with other groups focused on AI security, CoSAI believes it is uniquely positioned to establish standards that can be widely agreed-upon and adopted due to its diverse and high-profile membership roster.

"As a Founding Member of the Coalition for Secure AI, Microsoft will partner with similarly committed organizations towards creating industry standards for ensuring that AI systems and the machine learning required to develop them are built with security by default and with safe and responsible use and practices in mind," said Microsoft's AI safety chief Yonatan Zunger in a prepared statement. "Through membership and partnership within the Coalition for Secure AI, Microsoft continues its commitment to empower every person and every organization on the planet to do more ... securely."

"From day one, AWS AI infrastructure and the Amazon services built on top of it have had security and privacy features built-in that give customers strong isolation with flexible control over their systems and data," commented Paul Vixie, vice president and Distinguished Engineer at Amazon Web Services. "As a sponsor of CoSAI, we're excited to collaborate with the industry on developing needed standards and practices that will strengthen AI security for everyone."

"Developing and deploying AI technologies that are secure and trustworthy is central to OpenAI's mission," said Nick Hamilton, head of Governance, Risk and Compliance at OpenAI. "We believe that developing robust standards and practices is essential for ensuring the safe and responsible use of AI and we're committed to collaborating across the industry to do so."

Per CoSAI's founding charter, the group intends to find and share mitigations for AI security risks such as "stealing the model, data poisoning of the training data, injecting malicious inputs through prompt injection, scaled abuse prevention, membership inference attacks, model inversion attacks or gradient inversion attacks to infer private information, and extracting confidential information from the training data."

Interestingly, the group does not consider the following areas to be part of its purview: "misinformation, hallucinations, hateful or abusive content, bias, malware generation, phishing content generation, or other topics in the domain of content safety."

At its outset, CoSAI plans to pursue the following three research areas:

  • AI software supply chain security: The group will explore how to assess the safety of a given AI system based on its provenance. For instance, the group will examine who trained the AI system and how, as well as whether its training process may have left the AI vulnerable to tampering at any point.
  • Security framework development: The group will identify "investments and mitigation strategies" to address the security vulnerabilities in both today's AI systems, as well as future versions.
  • Security and privacy governance: The group will create guidelines to help AI developers and vendors measure risk in their systems.

CoSAI expects to release a paper by the end of this year providing an overview of its findings.

About the Author

Gladys Rama (@GladysRama3) is the editorial director of Converge360.

Featured

  • open laptop in a college classroom with holographic AI icons like a brain and data charts rising from the screen

    4 Ways Universities Are Using Google AI Tools for Learning and Administration

    In a recent blog post, Google shared an array of education customer stories, showcasing ways institutions are using AI tools like Gemini and NotebookLM to transform both learning and administrative tasks.

  • illustration of a human head with a glowing neural network in the brain, connected to tech icons on a cool blue-gray background

    Meta Launches Stand-Alone AI App

    Meta Platforms has introduced a stand-alone artificial intelligence app built on its proprietary Llama 4 model, intensifying the competitive race in generative AI alongside OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and xAI.

  • three main icons—a cloud, a user profile, and a padlock—connected by circuit lines on a blue abstract background

    Report: Identity Has Become a Critical Security Perimeter for Cloud Services

    A new threat landscape report points to new cloud vulnerabilities. According to the 2025 Global Threat Landscape Report from Fortinet, while misconfigured cloud storage buckets were once a prime vector for cybersecurity exploits, other cloud missteps are gaining focus.

  • Stylized illustration showing cybersecurity elements like shields, padlocks, and secure cloud icons on a neutral, minimalist digital background

    Microsoft Announces Security Advancements

    Microsoft has announced major security advancements across its product portfolio and practices. The work is part of its Secure Future Initiative (SFI), a multiyear cybersecurity transformation the company calls the largest engineering project in company history.