AI Governance Building Blocks
The four pillars of successful AI governance.
AI Policy
A written document defining rules and boundaries for AI usage in the organization.
Roles & Responsibilities
Who decides on AI strategy? Who is responsible for compliance? Who manages the platform?
Technical Controls
DLP, PII detection, access control and audit trail as technical implementation of the policy.
Monitoring & Review
Regular evaluation of AI usage, policy adjustments and compliance reports.
An international reference framework for AI management systems is ISO/IEC 42001:2023 — the first standard that specifies requirements for an AI Management System (AIMS).
How HOVIGuard Supports
Frequently asked questions about AI governance
Which building blocks belong to AI governance?+
Common building blocks: a written AI policy, clear roles and responsibilities, technical controls such as DLP, PII detection and access management, plus regular monitoring and review of usage. The specific setup should fit the individual company.
What is an AI policy and what should it contain?+
An AI policy is a written document that describes the rules for AI use in the company. Typical content: permitted tools and models, allowed and forbidden data categories, user obligations, roles and escalation paths and the link to data protection and compliance requirements.
How can AI governance be implemented technically?+
Technical implementation may include building blocks such as centralised access, identity and role management, content and PII filters, audit logging and reporting. HOVIGuard offers these blocks in one platform — the organisational anchoring remains with the company.
Who should be responsible for AI governance?+
A joint responsibility of management, IT, data protection, compliance and business functions is common. Clear role assignment (e.g. platform ownership, policy ownership) supports implementation. Concrete roles can vary by company size and industry.
What does HOVIGuard contribute to AI governance?+
HOVIGuard provides technical building blocks: RBAC-based access management, automatic DLP and PII detection, audit trail and dashboards/reports for monitoring. The platform supports implementation and traceability — the policy content and legal assessment remain with the company.
