Built on six patent-pending innovations.
Govern360 isn't a re-skinned GRC tool. The architecture — how policy compiles into native enforcement, how state is verified, how AI consumption is governed at runtime — is the subject of six pending U.S. patent applications.
Patent-pending · 01
Automated Enforcement Plan Generation
Policy intent — written once, scoped to your real org — compiles automatically into native configuration for the plane that owns each surface: Purview specs, Intune profiles, SASE rules, AI-gateway policies.
Patent-pending · 02
Verified Governance Execution
A formal state machine tracks every control through Compiled → Marked applied → Verified, each transition backed by evidence. What can't be verified by a live API shows as Not evidenced — never a false green.
Patent-pending · 03
Multi-Platform Governance Orchestration
A vendor-neutral broker maps one governance intent across multiple enforcement planes at once — Purview, Intune, SASE, AI gateways — so coverage stays consistent without re-implementing policy per tool.
Patent-pending · 04
Runtime AI Cost & Usage Governance
Token telemetry from OpenAI, Azure OpenAI, Anthropic, Bedrock, and Vertex is normalized to one schema, attributed to users, teams, and agents, and evaluated against budgets — without proxying model calls.
Patent-pending · 05
Non-Human Identity Privilege Governance
Least-privilege configuration for AI agents and service principals compiles across the identity planes you already run — workload-identity issuers, IdPs, secrets managers — with read-back-gated trust state.
Patent-pending · 06
MCP Tool-Call Governance
Tool calls over the Model Context Protocol are governed as first-class events: each tool pinned by a signed manifest (SHA-256), bound to a policy contract, and metered alongside direct model calls as one unit.
What "patent-pending" means here. Govern360 has filed six U.S. patent applications covering this architecture. Pending applications don't grant exclusive rights until issued, and timelines and outcomes vary. We mention it because investors and enterprise buyers ask — not as a substitute for the working product, which is already in customers' hands.