Brain Corp, the real-world artificial intelligence (AI) company, announced that its BrainOS platform has successfully completed a SOC 2 Type II examination—a rigorous, independent audit of how it secures data and operates systems over time.
With tens of thousands of autonomous robots already operating in commercial environments worldwide, the conversation around AI is shifting from proving it works to ensuring it can be trusted at scale. As this technology moves off screens and into physical spaces—including stores, warehouses, and airports—concerns around safety, data protection, and operational risk are becoming critically important for companies and regulators alike.
Brain Corp’s SOC 2 compliance comes at a time of growing global pressure to establish clearer guardrails around AI. From federal agencies to enterprise buyers, scrutiny is shifting toward how systems are governed, monitored, and secured—especially when they interact with people and sensitive business data.
Brain Corp’s autonomy platform, BrainOS, powers more than 40,000 autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) operating in commercial spaces across six continents, supporting tasks ranging from cleaning to inventory management. At that level, ensuring consistent security practices and operational integrity is fundamental to deployment, as even small vulnerabilities can have real-world consequences.
For organizations deploying physical AI in their environments, where autonomous systems interact with people, facilities, and sensitive operational data, such validation is becoming a prerequisite for enterprise adoption, procurement, and long-term rollouts.
"Trust in autonomous systems isn’t something you can retrofit; it must be a foundational element of the architecture," says Krystal Mattich, VP of Trust and Infrastructure at Brain Corp. "It begins with how we secure data and extends through continuous system monitoring and proactive risk management. Frameworks like SOC 2 provide the independent validation necessary to demonstrate that our systems meet the expectations enterprises and regulators are now setting."
By embedding security and safety into its platform architecture, Brain Corp enables partners to accelerate deployment timelines and navigate enterprise procurement processes more efficiently, providing the enterprise-grade infrastructure required to build, deploy, and scale autonomous systems in complex environments.
In addition to the confidence that SOC 2 compliance instills, Brain Corp’s available SOC 2 documentation contributes to significant reductions in time spent on compliance-related requirements, helping organizations move from pilot programs to scaled deployments with less friction and greater trust.
"BrainOS provides the proven autonomy foundation that powers our industrial inventory scanning solutions," shares Dan Johnson, CEO of Dane Technologies. "By building on Brain Corp’s robust and secure infrastructure, we've accelerated our vision for solving the warehouse visibility gap."
For enterprise customers, the SOC 2 Type II compliance translates into a lower-risk path to adopting automation, with the assurance that systems are designed to meet the security and safety expectations of large-scale, public-facing environments.
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