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Passionately curious about Data, Databases and Systems Complexity. Data is ubiquitous, the database universe is dichotomous (structured and unstructured), expanding and complex. Find my Database Research at SQLToolkit.co.uk . Microsoft Data Platform MVP

"The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing" Einstein



Wednesday, 8 July 2026

Microsoft Purview Communication Compliance: When the Risk Is in the Conversation

Not all corporate risk shows up quietly in the structured data footprint and sometimes, it manifests in how people talk to each other. It lives in instant messages sent too quickly, in chat threads that feel deceptively informal, and in split-second moments where judgment slips. It is the exact point where corporate compliance becomes highly human and highly unpredictable.

What It Is

Microsoft Purview Communication Compliance is a specialized boundary system designed to monitor, evaluate, and remediate internal and external workplace interactions across an enterprise's communication landscape. Rather than analyzing static data resting silently inside cloud repositories, this solution targets data in transit. It functions as an automated review network that flags behavioural friction, regulatory violations, and cultural exposure in real time as digital conversations occur.



What It Actually Does

The platform works by running live data feeds from enterprise applications through a centralized policy engine.

Multi-Channel Analysis

The solution captures, translates, and scans information across a wide variety of collaborative touchpoints:

  • Microsoft Teams chats, channels, and meeting transcripts.

  • Exchange Online email traffic.

  • Viva Engage communication feeds.

  • Microsoft 365 Copilot prompts and AI-generated outputs.

  • Integrated third-party networks (such as WhatsApp, Zoom, or Slack via data connectors).

Automated Analysis to Human Action

Instead of relying on rigid keyword blacklists that flood teams with false positives, the platform utilizes machine learning classifiers and optical character recognition (OCR) to detect deeper context.  The system isolates three primary risk clusters:

  • Conduct Violations: Workplace harassment, targeted threats, discrimination, and explicit profanity.

  • Regulatory Infractions: Anti-money laundering triggers, unauthorized financial advising, inside information sharing, or collusion signals.

  • Material Exposure: Accidental distribution of sensitive assets, such as source code or intellectual property, inside casual conversations.

Once an alert triggers, the item enters a secure workspace. Authorized human reviewers can then investigate the context, notify the individual, instantly pull the message from view, or escalate the event directly to HR or legal teams.

Where the Real Value Sits

Most enterprises possess well-drafted corporate codes of conduct. The operational bottleneck is enforcing them consistently. Modern business communication happens at breakneck speeds. Context is easily lost across endless threads, and without active oversight, behavioral toxicities or regulatory infractions are typically only uncovered after institutional harm or financial exposure has occurred.

This tool shifts an organization from a reactive posture to a proactive one. It establishes early systemic visibility, letting compliance teams catch deteriorating behavioural trends or data leaks before they escalate into formal employee grievances, public public-relations crises, or massive regulatory penalties.

Why This Matters More Now

The corporate collaboration space has decentralized. Workplace conversations are no longer confined to formal, auditable email exchanges. They are fluid, continuous, and highly distributed across platforms.

The introduction of Generative AI tools introduces an entirely new dimension of corporate communication risk:

  • Employees pasting confidential operational or financial data into external or internal AI prompts.

  • Malicious or accidental phrasing that breaches data walls.

  • The rapid dissemination of unverified AI outputs across internal chats before manual reviews can intercept them.

Manual oversight cannot scale alongside this volume of data. Automated, intelligent monitoring is no longer a luxury for highly regulated sectors; it has become an operational necessity for the modern digital workplace.

Where It Fits in the Bigger Picture

Communication Compliance operates at a distinct layer of the security framework compared to traditional data protection tools:

Tooling LayerAnalytical FocusCore Question Addressed
Data Loss Prevention (DLP)Structured data boundaries and file transfers“Is protected data being sent to an unverified location?”
Purview AuditHistorical system and user activity logs“Who did what, and when did they do it?”
Communication ComplianceReal-time behavioral and conversational tone“Are people interacting in a way that creates liability?”

When configured correctly, Communication Compliance works as an early-warning signal feeder, pushing high-value risk indicators directly into broader user risk profiles to help form a holistic view of insider threat metrics over time.

The Business Problem It Solves

Without automated communication monitoring, an organization remains completely blind to cultural or regulatory erosion until an incident forces it into the open via:

  • Formal HR complaints and litigation.

  • Whistleblower actions or external leaks.

  • Punitive regulatory audits.

By the time these events occur, the corporate, financial, and brand damage is already sustained. This solution solves the visibility gap by intercepting the risk at the conversational level ensuring violations are caught early, reviewed within their full conversational context, and remediated cleanly before they disrupt the wider business.

Getting Started Safely

Because corporate communications are deeply personal, monitoring must be deployed proportionately, transparently, and with strict privacy guardrails.

  • Focus the Scope First: Avoid monitoring everyone for everything on day one. Start with high-risk scenarios, such as sensitive business units, roles subject to external financial regulations, or specific high-frequency keyword dictionaries.

  • Enforce Privacy by Design: Utilize built-in pseudonymization features to mask user identities from investigators during the initial triage phase, preventing internal bias.

  • Establish Clear Workflows: Ensure that your compliance reviewers, HR personnel, and legal stakeholders are trained on exactly how to interpret machine learning flags, clear false positives, and escalate valid alerts through a defined chain of command.

The Reality

You cannot truly manage corporate data risk without actively managing how your workforce utilizes that data to communicate. Communication Compliance is frequently bypassed by IT teams because it feels less like a traditional network control and more like an organizational policy tool. In reality, it targets the single most volatile variable in any technology environment human behavior and that is exactly where true organizational risk begins.

References

Friday, 3 July 2026

Microsoft Purview eDiscovery: When Evidence Becomes Action

Organizations spend a great deal of time building controls, writing policies, and collecting audit data. Most of it sits quietly in the background until the day somebody asks for evidence.

That request might come from a regulator, a court, an auditor, or an internal investigation. Regardless of where it comes from, the challenge is rarely whether data exists. The challenge is finding the right information quickly, showing why it matters, and being confident the evidence will stand up to scrutiny.

This is the point at which compliance stops being theoretical and becomes operational.

What It Is

Microsoft Purview eDiscovery is the end-to-end capability that allows organizations to identify, preserve, collect, review, and export electronically stored information (ESI) for legal, regulatory, and internal investigations. It spans the entire Microsoft 365 environment including Exchange Online, Teams, SharePoint, OneDrive, and Viva Engage and containerizes data within a structured case. This specific structure is what differentiates eDiscovery from basic keyword searching:

  • Search merely finds data.

  • eDiscovery transforms data into defensible evidence.




What it actually does

eDiscovery takes the raw activity logs and historical data inside your tenant and processes them through a rigorous, repeatable workflow:

1. Case Creation

An investigation begins by establishing a dedicated case. This case serves as a secure, role-based container for everything that follows custodians, legal holds, targeted searches, isolated review sets, and final export logs.

2. Identification & Search

Using robust query conditions (such as targeted keywords, specific user attributes, file metadata, or precise timeframes), teams search globally across organizational communication and storage channels. These searches are iteratively refined to minimize background noise and isolate exactly what matters.

3. Preservation (Legal Holds)

Once relevant data locations or custodians are identified, an administrative hold is placed on the live content. This ensures information cannot be modified, deleted, or purged by users or automated retention policies while an investigation is pending.

4. Collection & Review

Data is extracted and moved into a specialized Review Set a controlled, isolated environment within Purview. For advanced scenarios, built-in machine learning models, attorney-client privilege detection, and conversation threading allow review teams to cull large volumes of documents efficiently.

5. Defensible Export

The final output is not just a loose folder of files. It is a highly organized, legally sound package of evidence complete with detailed metadata tables, chain-of-custody tracking, and audit trails detailing exactly how the data was handled.

Where the Real Value Sits

Most organizations do not suffer from a lack of data; they suffer from an inability to locate the critical piece of it with a time limit. Without a centralized, structured workflow, data discovery defaults into a high-risk scramble, IT teams end up searching fragmented systems manually, results come back inconsistent, and evidence integrity is compromised resulting in a drop of confidence.

eDiscovery eliminates this exposure by replacing chaos with a structured workflow. Instead of asking, Where do we even begin looking? legal and risk teams move immediately to: What is relevant, and how do we prove it?

Why This Matters More Now

The modern communication footprint has changed. Critical evidence no longer sits neatly in linear email chains. It is scattered across fast-moving chat channels, live-collaborated documents, virtual meeting transcripts, and AI-assisted prompts. This creates a massive burden of data volume and complexity. At the same time, external conditions are tightening:

  • Regulators expect significantly faster turnaround times for data access requests (such as DSARs or freedom of information requests).

  • Legal adversaries demand complete accountability and strict adherence to data preservation rules.

  • Executive teams need to fulfill these requests without completely disrupting daily business operations.

Meeting these demands is virtually impossible without built-in automation and an interconnected compliance ecosystem.

Where It Fits in the Bigger Picture

To understand its role in risk management, it helps to see how eDiscovery pairs directly with underlying system data:

  • Purview Audit answers: "What happened?" (The raw behavioral timeline).

  • Purview eDiscovery answers: "What matters, and how do we legally prove it?" (The extracted narrative).

It works in tandem with Records and Lifecycle Management which ensures the correct data is preserved and available in the first place and Compliance Manager, which maps your operational readiness to global regulatory frameworks.

The Business Problem It Solves

When an organization faces a litigation or compliance request, the primary risk isn't just the underlying event itself it is how poorly the organization responds to it.

Using manual methods introduces significant liability via slow data extraction, accidental gaps in the collection, or unverified outputs. Purview eDiscovery solves this operational vulnerability by guaranteeing that:

  • Crucial data is discovered and isolated swiftly.

  • Evidence is preserved instantaneously without altering user workflows.

  • The entire investigative process is completely transparent, repeatable, and auditable.

The Reality

eDiscovery is rarely a daily task for most corporate teams. It sits quietly in the background during normal operations but when a regulatory notice or litigation order hits, it instantly becomes one of the most vital capabilities your organization possesses. In that high-stakes moment, success comes down to a single criteria: whether your data management systems can hold up under intense external pressure.

References

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

AI Governance is a Hollow Framework Without Data Governance

The Hard Truth: We are trying to govern the outputs of frontier AI without establishing strict control over the inputs.

Imagine a near-future scenario: a frontier AI developer launches its next-generation model family. Within days, researchers uncover a zero-day jailbreak vulnerability that allows the model to map and exploit critical software vulnerabilities with unprecedented autonomy. In a scramble, the federal government issues an unprecedented emergency directive, forcing the developer to suspend global API access under the banner of national security.

While this sounds like a techno-thriller, the current geopolitical trajectory suggests this crisis is an inevitability. When governments eventually panic and react to high-risk algorithmic outputs, they will find that treating commercial AI models like sudden tactical threats is an unsustainable way to regulate technology.

AI models do not generate safety risks out of thin air; they learn them from data. Reactive government bans and real-time output filters are panic buttons. True thought leadership in this space requires looking upstream.

The Missing Link: Why Data Governance is AI Governance

Effective risk management for frontier models cannot rely on real-time safeguards alone. True resilience requires structural data governance built across three distinct operational pillars:

1. Data Provenance and Vulnerability Tracing

If a model can be steered into identifying critical software infrastructure vulnerabilities, we must ask: What specific datasets allowed it to map these exploits? Data governance mandates a transparent, verifiable ledger of training data. Regulators and developers must be able to audit what a model actually "knows" long before it is deployed to the public.

2. Dynamic Data Retention as a Defense Layer

When developers scramble to mitigate active exploits, they rely heavily on short-term telemetry retention policies to analyze user prompt interactions and track malicious behavior. Knowing exactly how user data is ingested, logged, and securely monitored is the only way to detect non-universal, highly sophisticated jailbreaks in real time.

3. Access Control and Data Sovereignty

Enforcing geographical or citizenship-based restrictions on a cloud-native, globally distributed API environment is a logistical nightmare. Without ironclad data access governance—restricting who can query the model and where that telemetry is stored—preventing unauthorized cross-border interaction with advanced reasoning systems is practically impossible.

Four Critical Questions for Tech Sovereignty

As the boundary between commercial technology and national security blurs, organizations and global regulators must confront the deeper systemic questions facing the ecosystem:

  • Who defines the threshold? Who determines when an advanced reasoning capability crosses the line from a massive commercial benefit to an existential national security threat?

  • What are the standards of validation? What transparent, independent, and technically grounded benchmarks must exist before a governing body can disrupt commercial ecosystems?

  • How do we prevent total fragmentation? If strict export controls dictate who can use the best models, how do we avoid a fractured digital world where access to advanced reasoning is determined entirely by geographical alignment?

  • What role does international cooperation play? When the regulatory actions of one nation can disable access for businesses worldwide, how do we build international institutions capable of managing global technological externalities?

Moving From Friction to Resilience

If we continue to treat AI safety as a series of sudden regulatory halts and reactive software patches, we will paralyze market innovation without actually making the digital estate any safer.

Responsible AI is the destination, but we cannot get there without two non-negotiable operational tracks:

  1. AI Governance: Providing the systemic oversight, legal compliance, and risk frameworks needed to manage model deployment.

  2. Data Governance: Securing the upstream integrity, tracing, and access controls of the information that shapes those models in the first place.

Reactive regulations are a sign of a system in deep friction. True leadership demands that we look upstream, securing the data infrastructure today so we can safely innovate the AI capabilities of tomorrow.

Sources & Further Reading (Alternative Options)

  • White House Policy: "Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence" — focusing on the mandates for safety testing and red-teaming for frontier models.

  • Geopolitical Precedents: Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) guidelines on advanced computing and semiconductor export controls to showcase how the U.S. government actually restricts technology infrastructure.

  • Technical Frameworks: The NIST AI Risk Management Framework (AI RMF), which details the industry-standard pillars for measuring and governing AI risk, mapping beautifully to your data governance argument.

Saturday, 27 June 2026

The End of the Governance Silo: Building a Unified AI & Data Strategy

There’s a pattern emerging across organizations adopting AI. They stand up an “AI Governance” function. They build a new ethics board. They create new policies for models, prompts, and outputs. And yet, at the same time, they leave Data Governance exactly where it was separate, disconnected, and often treated as a legacy concern. It feels progressive. It looks sensible. But in reality, it creates something far more dangerous, The Governance Silo and with it comes a hidden cost the Silo Tax:

  • Slower deployment
  • Conflicting rules
  • And, most critically, gaps in accountability and control

In truth, AI governance is not a separate discipline. It never has been. AI is not a new domain to govern. It is an extension of the data ecosystem you already have and when those two worlds are separated, governance doesn’t just weaken it fractures.

The Dangerous Illusion of AI Governance as a Separate Discipline

The instinct to separate AI governance often comes from a good place. AI introduces new risks: bias, explainability, ethical use, automated decision-making. These feel different from traditional data concerns like quality, ownership, and classification. But this separation ignores a fundamental truth that AI is entirely dependent on data. Without strong data governance covering lineage, quality, ownership, and control AI governance simply cannot function effectively. You cannot explain an AI decision if you cannot explain the data that shaped it. You cannot ensure fairness in outputs if you cannot trust the inputs. You cannot manage AI risk if the data pipeline itself is opaque and yet, many organizations are trying to do exactly that.

The Transparency Gap: When AI Works… But No One Knows Why

Imagine an AI model making the “right” decision. It performs well. It delivers value. The business is happy. But then comes a challenge from a regulator, a customer, or an internal audit. Why did the model make that decision? This is where the governance silo breaks down. AI governance demands explainabilityBut explainability depends on data lineage knowing where data came from, how it was transformed, and how it was used. Without that lineage, the organization is left with a model that work but cannot be trusted and in an AI-driven world, that is not a technical issue. It’s a business risk. The real question is no longer Does the model perform? It is Can we prove why it behaves the way it does?



The Feedback Loop: When AI Starts Creating Its Own Data

AI doesn’t just consume data. It creates it. Predictions, classifications, synthetic datasets, generated content all of these become new data assets flowing back into the organization and this is where the second major risk emerges. If that AI-generated data is not governed, catalogued, classified, and controlled it begins to operate outside the governance perimeter.

Over time, this creates feedback loops:

  • Models trained on outputs from previous models
  • Synthetic data reinforcing hidden biases
  • Decisions based on increasingly distorted sources

Unchecked, these loops can degrade accuracy, amplify bias, and erode trust in AI systems. This is the point where governance stops being about compliance and becomes about control of reality itself. because if you lose control of your data, you lose control of your AI.

The Blueprint for a Unified Governance Model

So what does a better model look like? Not two parallel governance structures. Not another layer of oversight. But a single, joined-up governance system that treats data and AI as one continuous pipeline. In practice, that means three fundamental shifts.

1. A Shared Language Across Data and AI

The simplest problems are often the most damaging. If your Data team defines “sensitive data” differently to your AI team. If “accuracy” means something different in a model than it does in a dataset. You don’t have governance. You have misalignment. A unified governance model starts with a shared taxonomy, common definitions, classifications, and standards that flow consistently from data creation through to AI output. This is what eliminates conflicting rules and the friction they create.

2. A Single Source of Truth for Data and AI Assets

Most organizations already have a data catalog. Few have one that extends into AI. A unified model requires a single, integrated metadata layer where:

  • Data is tagged, classified, and owned
  • AI datasets are labelled as “AI-ready” or “restricted”
  • Lineage connects data sources directly to model outputs

This creates visibility across the entire pipeline from ingestion to decision and that visibility is what enables trust because governance is not about documentation. It is about knowing what is happening, in real time, across your data and AI ecosystem.

3. One Governance Body, Not Two

The final and often most overlooked shift is organizational. Many organizations create separate AI ethics boards alongside existing data governance councils. This is a mistake. Effective governance requires joined-up decision making, where:

  • Data sources are assessed alongside model outputs
  • Ethical considerations are evaluated across the full lifecycle
  • Accountability is defined end-to-end

A cross-functional governance council bringing together business, data, AI, risk, and compliance is already the established model for governing enterprise data.  The answer is not to create another council. It’s to evolve the one you already have.

From Silos to Systems: A Shift in Thinking

The organizations that struggle with AI governance are often those still thinking in layers:

  • Data layer
  • AI layer
  • Governance layer

But in reality, these are not separate stacks. They are one system.

Data flows into models.
Models generate outputs.
Outputs become new data.

And governance must sit across that entire loop. This is why leading organizations are moving toward a single governance umbrella one that integrates data and AI governance to create consistency, transparency, and enforceable controls because in a world of continuous data and continuous automation, governance can no longer be fragmented. It has to be continuous too.

Conclusion: The Road to Scalable AI

There’s a tendency in AI discussions to focus on the models, the algorithms, the tools and the capabilities. But that’s not where success will be determined. The organizations that win the AI race will not be those with the most advanced models. They will be the ones with the most trusted, controlled, and governed data pipelinesBecause ultimately AI is the car. Data Governance is the road. And no matter how powerful the car is you cannot win a race on a road full of potholes.


Wednesday, 24 June 2026

Microsoft Purview Security Tooling Blog Series

The biggest data security risk in Microsoft 365 isn't external attackers. It's the controls you think you've already implemented. Most organisations believe their data is secure because they have Microsoft 365. The reality is often very different. Over the last few weeks, I've written a series exploring the Microsoft Purview data security capabilities that organisations regularly purchase but don't fully implement, configure, or operationalise.


The common assumption is that data security is a technology problem. In practice, it's a visibility, governance, and control problem. Knowing where your sensitive data is, who has access to it, how it moves, and how you respond when something goes wrong requires much more than switching on a licence.

The series explores:

🔹 Information Protection – classifying and protecting what matters
🔹 Data Loss Prevention – turning classifications into enforceable controls
🔹 Insider Risk Management – understanding risky behaviours before they become incidents
🔹 Information Barriers – controlling who can collaborate with whom
🔹 Data Security Investigations – turning alerts into evidence and action
🔹 DSPM for AI and Data – exposing hidden risks and overexposure across your estate

If you're working in data governance, security, compliance, or responsible AI, these capabilities are becoming increasingly important as organisations seek to balance productivity with protection. The challenge isn't buying the technology. It is implementing the controls that make the technology effective.



You can read the full series here:


References

The Reality of Data Security in M365 (Purview Protection)

Microsoft Purview Information Protection: The Control Most Organizations Think They Already Have 

Microsoft Purview Information Barriers: Controlling Who Can Work With What

Microsoft Purview Data Security Investigations: When Alerts Become Evidence

Microsoft Purview DSPM: Unmasking Your True Data Risks

Microsoft Purview Data Loss Prevention: Where Classification Becomes Control

Microsoft Purview Insider Risk Management: When Data Movement Becomes Behaviour


Tuesday, 23 June 2026

Scaling at Cloud Speed: Moving from Manual Checklists to CDMC Automation

For years, data governance has relied on a familiar model: committees, policies, spreadsheets, and periodic reviews. It worked when data moved slowly, systems were predictable, and change could be managed through human oversight but that world no longer exists.

Today, data is created, transformed, and consumed continuously across cloud platforms. AI models are trained on that data in near real time. Decisions happen in milliseconds. And yet, in many organizations, governance is still anchored in manual controls and retrospective checks. There’s an uncomfortable truth emerging: human-in-the-loop governance cannot scale to cloud speed. The question is no longer whether governance is important. It’s whether governance can keep up and this is where the industry has been quietly converging on a new answer.


The Missing Link: Why CDMC Exists

The EDM Council didn’t create the Cloud Data Management Capabilities (CDMC) framework to replace existing governance thinking. It created it because something was missing. Frameworks like DAMA-DMBOK remain foundational they define what good governance looks like across domains such as data quality, metadata, and security. But they were never designed for an environment where:

  • Data is distributed across cloud services
  • Access decisions are made dynamically via APIs
  • Policies must be enforced continuously not reviewed quarterly

CDMC fills that gap. It translates governance intent into 14 concrete, measurable controls, designed specifically for cloud environments, with a clear emphasis on automation and continuous enforcement

In other words, it moves governance from principle to execution.

From Policy to Enforcement: What Automation Really Means

The power of CDMC is not just that it defines controls, it defines controls that can be automated, monitored, and evidenced. This is a fundamental shift. Traditional governance asks: Do we have a policy? CDMC asks Is this control being executed automatically, right now, and can we prove it? Across its 14 controls spanning governance, classification, privacy, lifecycle, and architecture, CDMC embeds governance directly into the data pipeline itself. 

The impact of that shift becomes most visible when you look at a few critical controls.

Control #1: Governance Accountability in an AI World

One of the simplest, yet most powerful, requirements is this: every sensitive data asset must have a defined owner. This is not new in principle. DAMA has long emphasised stewardship and accountability but CDMC enforces it through automation ensuring that ownership fields are populated in data catalogs, monitored, and escalated when missing. In an AI-driven context, this becomes critical. If a model produces biased or incorrect outputs, the question is no longer abstract. It becomes operational:

Who owns the data that trained this model?

Without automated ownership tracking, accountability collapses. With it, organizations can trace responsibility back to the source.

Control #11: Data Privacy that doesn’t rely on Humans

Privacy has always been a governance priority. But manual processes, reviews, sign-offs, compliance checklists are no longer sufficient when data is constantly moving and being repurposed. CDMC embeds privacy into the flow of data itself. It requires automated triggers, such as data protection impact assessments for personal data, ensuring that privacy controls are activated consistently and at scale. This matters even more in AI scenarios, where training datasets can be assembled from multiple sources rapidly. You simply cannot rely on someone remembering to remove PII before it enters a pipeline. You need a system that ensures it never gets there in the first place.

Control #12: Stopping Data Swamps before they start

Data quality has always been a known challenge. What’s changed is the speed at which poor-quality data propagates. In traditional environments, issues might take weeks to surface. In AI pipelines, they surface instantly and at scale. CDMC addresses this by requiring data quality measurement as a built-in control, applied at ingestion and continuously monitored through metrics. This is a subtle but profound shift. Instead of discovering problems downstream, organizations prevent them upstream. Instead of cleaning data after the fact, they stop poor data from entering the ecosystem at all. This is how you avoid the modern equivalent of a data warehouse problem: the AI-era data swamp.



The joined-up Framework: DAMA as Constitution, CDMC as Enforcement

It’s tempting to position CDMC as a replacement for traditional frameworks but that misses the point. The real strength comes from how they work together.

  • DAMA-DMBOK defines the principles of governance, the constitution that outlines what good looks like
  • CDMC defines the execution, the enforcement layer that ensures those principles are actually applied

Where DAMA says:

Data must be secure.

CDMC operationalises it as:

Security controls must be enabled, monitored, and evidenced automatically for all sensitive data.

Where DAMA defines accountability, CDMC ensures accountability exists in the system. Where DAMA defines quality, CDMC ensures quality is measured continuously. This is the bridge many organizations have been missing.

From Governance Theatre to Operational Reality

There is a growing gap between organizations that talk about governance and those that have embedded it into their platforms.

Manual governance processes, however well designed, become governance theatre in cloud environments:

  • Policies exist, but are not enforced
  • Ownership is defined, but not maintained
  • Controls are documented, but not executed

CDMC changes the conversation. It forces organisations to move from:

  • Periodic assurance → continuous control
  • Documentation → instrumentation
  • Manual oversight → automated guardrails

And that’s what makes it so relevant in the age of AI.

AI doesn’t remove the need for governance, it increases it exponentially. But it also exposes the limits of traditional approaches. You cannot govern at cloud speed with spreadsheets, committees, and retrospective checks. You need governance that is:

  • Embedded
  • Automated
  • Measurable
  • Continuous

That’s the shift CDMC represents. Not a new theory of governance but a new way of making governance real.

References