Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from Tallwire.

      What's Hot

      AI Productivity Gains Concentrated Among High-Skilled Workers, Study Finds

      February 28, 2026

      Single Compromised Account Exposes 1.2 Million French Banking Records

      February 28, 2026

      Sam Altman Says ‘AI Washing’ Is Being Used to Mask Corporate Layoffs

      February 28, 2026
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
      • Tech
      • AI
      • Get In Touch
      Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
      TallwireTallwire
      • Tech

        Taara Beam Launch Brings 25Gbps Optical Wireless Networks to Cities

        February 27, 2026

        Global Memory Shortage Set to Push Up Prices on Phones, Laptops, and More

        February 27, 2026

        OpenAI’s Stargate Data Center Ambitions Hit Major Roadblocks

        February 27, 2026

        Large Hadron Collider Enters Third Shutdown For Major Upgrade

        February 26, 2026

        Stellantis Faces Massive Losses and Strategic Shift After Misjudging EV Market Demand

        February 26, 2026
      • AI

        AI Productivity Gains Concentrated Among High-Skilled Workers, Study Finds

        February 28, 2026

        X to Let Users Mark Posts ‘Made With AI’ as Platform Eyes Voluntary Disclosure Feature

        February 27, 2026

        Uber Rolls Out “Uber Autonomous Solutions” To Support Third-Party Robotaxi Partners

        February 27, 2026

        Global Memory Shortage Set to Push Up Prices on Phones, Laptops, and More

        February 27, 2026

        OpenAI’s Stargate Data Center Ambitions Hit Major Roadblocks

        February 27, 2026
      • Security

        Single Compromised Account Exposes 1.2 Million French Banking Records

        February 28, 2026

        PayPal Data Breach Exposed Customer Personal Information For Months

        February 27, 2026

        Discord Ends Persona Age Verification Trial Amid Privacy Backlash

        February 27, 2026

        FBI Issues Alert on Outdated Wi-Fi Routers Vulnerable to Cyber Attacks

        February 25, 2026

        Wikipedia Blacklists Archive.Today After DDoS Abuse And Content Manipulation

        February 24, 2026
      • Health

        Social Media Addiction Trial Draws Grieving Parents Seeking Accountability From Tech Platforms

        February 19, 2026

        Portugal’s Parliament OKs Law to Restrict Children’s Social Media Access With Parental Consent

        February 18, 2026

        Parents Paint 108 Names, Demand Snapchat Reform After Deadly Fentanyl Claims

        February 18, 2026

        UK Kids Turning to AI Chatbots and Acting on Advice at Alarming Rates

        February 16, 2026

        Landmark California Trial Sees YouTube Defend Itself, Rejects ‘Social Media’ and Addiction Claims

        February 16, 2026
      • Science

        Microsoft Claims 100 Percent Renewable Energy Match Across Global Electricity Use

        February 28, 2026

        Taara Beam Launch Brings 25Gbps Optical Wireless Networks to Cities

        February 27, 2026

        Large Hadron Collider Enters Third Shutdown For Major Upgrade

        February 26, 2026

        Google Phases Out Android’s Built-In Weather App, Replacing It With Search-Based Forecasts

        February 25, 2026

        Microsoft’s Breakthrough Suggests Data Could Be Preserved for 10,000 Years on Glass

        February 24, 2026
      • Tech

        Sam Altman Says ‘AI Washing’ Is Being Used to Mask Corporate Layoffs

        February 28, 2026

        Zuckerberg Testifies In Landmark Trial Over Alleged Teen Social Media Harms

        February 23, 2026

        Gay Tech Networks Under Spotlight In Silicon Valley Culture Debate

        February 23, 2026

        Google Co-Founder’s Epstein Contacts Reignite Scrutiny of Elite Tech Circles

        February 7, 2026

        Bill Gates Denies “Absolutely Absurd” Claims in Newly Released Epstein Files

        February 6, 2026
      TallwireTallwire
      Home»Tech»Startups Race to Offer Encrypted AI as Privacy Concerns Mount
      Tech

      Startups Race to Offer Encrypted AI as Privacy Concerns Mount

      Updated:February 22, 20265 Mins Read
      Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
      Startups Race to Offer Encrypted AI as Privacy Concerns Mount
      Startups Race to Offer Encrypted AI as Privacy Concerns Mount
      Share
      Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

      A growing wave of technology startups is pushing encrypted artificial intelligence as a way to attract privacy-worried users and enterprises, offering solutions that keep data secure even during processing and promise to prevent companies from storing or training on sensitive inputs. NEAR AI’s platform, for example, encrypts prompts and responses so that even model hosts can’t view or retain chats, targeting business customers concerned about traditional AI data exposure. In Europe, Internxt AI launched a conversational AI with full user anonymity and end-to-end encryption, hosted on regional servers and designed to comply with strict data-protection laws. Meanwhile, in the hardware space, Niobium, a Dayton-based startup, has raised more than $23 million to build custom silicon that accelerates fully homomorphic encryption (FHE), which allows computation on encrypted data and aims to make “zero-trust” computing practical at scale as quantum threats grow. These developments reflect a shift toward privacy-first AI technologies as alternatives to models that log or repurpose user data, signaling a competitive landscape of encrypted AI options for both enterprise and consumer markets.

      Sources: Tech.eu, Ohio Tech News

      Key Takeaways

      – Encrypted AI is becoming a selling point as startups tout advanced privacy protections to win customers uneasy about traditional data practices.

      – European privacy laws and sovereignty goals are shaping AI offerings like Internxt AI that promise zero data storage and compliance with GDPR.

      – Hardware solutions like homomorphic encryption accelerators are drawing substantial investment to address performance limitations and future-proof privacy in AI and computing.

      In-Depth

      In the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence, data privacy is increasingly a battleground for startup innovation and user trust. Traditional AI services from major tech companies often rely on collecting, storing, and using user data to improve model performance—a practice that can leave customers feeling exposed and vulnerable, especially in enterprise settings where sensitive information may be involved. In response, a new class of encrypted AI technologies has emerged, blending cryptography and machine learning to deliver privacy-oriented solutions across platforms and use cases.

      At the forefront of this trend is NEAR AI, one of the companies highlighted in Semafor’s coverage of encrypted AI. NEAR’s platform encrypts the inputs and outputs of AI interactions so that the underlying model host cannot view, retain, or use the content for training or other purposes. This built-in encryption works by encrypting user prompts locally before they are sent for processing; the hardware decrypts them within a secure environment, runs inference, and then returns the encrypted result. For privacy-minded enterprises, this can reduce the risk associated with sending sensitive queries to remote AI services. Traditional safeguards like on-device processing and strict storage limits—such as those offered by Apple for small tasks or WhatsApp for certain AI-powered messaging features—have their place, but end-to-end encrypted AI promises a higher level of confidentiality by default, minimizing data exposure even in transit or at rest.

      Europe is rapidly becoming a hub for privacy-first AI alternatives. Spanish tech company Internxt recently rolled out Internxt AI, a privacy-centric generative AI assistant designed to operate with total user anonymity and strict compliance with European data-protection standards like GDPR. Built entirely on EU infrastructure, this platform uses end-to-end encryption and a zero-knowledge architecture that prevents even the service provider from accessing or storing user data. The emphasis on data sovereignty—keeping information fully under user control and within regional legal boundaries—earns Internxt distinction from American and global competitors that may rely on broader data collection practices. By promising no logs, no tracking, and no linkage to user identities, Internxt’s approach mirrors broader European policy goals that treat privacy not as an optional feature but as a fundamental expectation of digital services.

      On the infrastructure side, companies like Niobium are tackling the performance challenges that come with advanced encryption techniques. Fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) has long been considered a potential “holy grail” of data privacy because it allows computations to be performed on encrypted data without ever decrypting it. This could fundamentally change how sensitive data is handled in cloud computing, AI training, healthcare analytics, and financial modeling. The technical obstacle has always been performance: FHE computations are orders of magnitude slower on standard hardware, making them impractical for most real-world applications. Niobium’s strategy is to build custom silicon accelerators that dramatically speed up FHE processing, enabling encrypted data workloads to run at efficiency levels closer to unencrypted systems. The company’s recent funding—over $23 million raised in an oversubscribed round—reflects investor confidence that privacy-preserving computing will be a critical foundation for future data security, especially as quantum computing threatens to break existing cryptographic standards.

      Taken together, these developments illustrate a broader shift in the AI industry toward technologies that don’t force users to choose between powerful AI and data privacy. From encrypted conversation interfaces to sovereign AI services and specialized hardware, the innovation ecosystem is responding to user and regulatory demand for stronger, verifiable privacy protections. For enterprises, this means new tools to safely integrate AI into workflows without exposing proprietary or confidential information. For consumers, it can inspire greater trust in AI interactions that historically have been opaque about data use and storage practices. As these encrypted AI technologies mature, they may well redefine baseline expectations for how AI systems handle personal and sensitive data in the years ahead.

      Apple Intel Quantum computing Startup
      Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
      Previous ArticleStartup Seeks to Shatter AI Data Center Dominance
      Next Article State Attorneys General Issue Safety Warning to AI Giants Over Chatbot Harms

      Related Posts

      AI Productivity Gains Concentrated Among High-Skilled Workers, Study Finds

      February 28, 2026

      Microsoft Claims 100 Percent Renewable Energy Match Across Global Electricity Use

      February 28, 2026

      Sam Altman Says ‘AI Washing’ Is Being Used to Mask Corporate Layoffs

      February 28, 2026

      Taara Beam Launch Brings 25Gbps Optical Wireless Networks to Cities

      February 27, 2026
      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Editors Picks

      Taara Beam Launch Brings 25Gbps Optical Wireless Networks to Cities

      February 27, 2026

      Global Memory Shortage Set to Push Up Prices on Phones, Laptops, and More

      February 27, 2026

      OpenAI’s Stargate Data Center Ambitions Hit Major Roadblocks

      February 27, 2026

      Large Hadron Collider Enters Third Shutdown For Major Upgrade

      February 26, 2026
      Popular Topics
      Startup Sundar Pichai Sam Altman Series B Robotics picks UAE Tech Taiwan Tech Satya Nadella Ransomware spotlight Tesla trending Qualcomm Tim Cook SpaceX Series A Quantum computing Tesla Cybertruck Samsung
      Major Tech Companies
      • Apple News
      • Google News
      • Meta News
      • Microsoft News
      • Amazon News
      • Samsung News
      • Nvidia News
      • OpenAI News
      • Tesla News
      • AMD News
      • Anthropic News
      • Elbit News
      AI & Emerging Tech
      • AI Regulation News
      • AI Safety News
      • Quantum Computing News
      • Robotics News
      Key People
      • Sam Altman News
      • Jensen Huang News
      • Elon Musk News
      • Mark Zuckerberg News
      • Sundar Pichai News
      • Tim Cook News
      • Satya Nadella News
      • Mustafa Suleyman News
      Global Tech & Policy
      • Israel Tech News
      • India Tech News
      • Taiwan Tech News
      • UAE Tech News
      Startups & Emerging Tech
      • Series A News
      • Series B News
      • Startup News
      Tallwire
      Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Threads Instagram RSS
      • Tech
      • Entertainment
      • Business
      • Government
      • Academia
      • Transportation
      • Legal
      • Press Kit
      © 2026 Tallwire. Optimized by ARMOUR Digital Marketing Agency.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.