Samsung SDS and Duality Technologies Convene Industry Leaders to Advance Privacy Standards

AI Research and industry community pledges to advance standards for Homomorphic Encryption

[Redmond, Washington] Samsung SDS and Duality Technologies convened AI research and industry leaders this week at the Microsoft campus in Redmond for a workshop focused on advancing standards for Homomorphic Encryption (HE). The meeting was aimed at expanding the standards defined in earlier meetings of the HE standardization community, comprised of experts representing industry as well as academia and government.

HE enables computations, including machine learning and AI analysis, on encrypted data, allowing data scientists, researchers and businesses to gain valuable insights without decrypting or exposing the underlying data or models – key for enabling data-driven digital transformation in all industries while complying with data privacy regulations. This is particularly useful where sensitive data is used in collaborations – for instance, in privacy-preserving collaboration between multiple healthcare and research centers, or inter-bank cooperation in financial crime investigations.

As a result of the workshop, additional schemes and protocols were included among HE standards, laying the foundation for a broad, interoperable secure computing ecosystem. Creating and defining clear standards is critical to fostering market adoption as Homomorphic Encryption becomes an increasingly practical solution to real-world problems.

“Homomorphic Encryption is over the threshold of market-adoption. Given that multiple HE solutions are being offered – some based on open source libraries and others on proprietary protocols – clear and robust industry standards are critical for customer confidence and adoption of solutions using this advanced privacy-enhancing technology,” said Dr. Kurt Rohloff, Co-founder and CTO of Duality. “We are excited to be collaborating with Microsoft, Samsung SDS and other leading practitioners from industry, academia and government to establish a comprehensive, interoperable standards framework that will broaden the utility and adoption of HE as the market-leading privacy-enhancing technology.”

Dr. Cho Jihoon, security research center leader at Samsung SDS said: "We believe this standardization meeting will play a pivotal role in making commercially applicable homomorphic encryption technologies, amid the rise of demand in the business sector, to cope with the latest artificial intelligence technologies and enhanced privacy regulations."

International standardization bodies such as the International Telecommunication Union (ITU-T) and representatives of the US government were among those attending the working sessions. The decisions taken will help facilitate the path towards further integration of HE into international security standards. Upcoming standardization meetings will be hosted by the UN/ITU-T and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL) in Geneva and by Samsung SDS in South Korea.