← Back to context Comment by JumpCrisscross 4 hours ago > OpenRouter’s architecture makes it inherently a compliance nightmareWhy? 4 comments JumpCrisscross Reply kube-system 4 hours ago Because the platform is designed to send data to numerous different backend data processors.Using something like Bedrock is a lot easier for compliance because the only processor is Amazon. joquarky 3 hours ago Amazon would never do anything nefarious. kube-system 3 hours ago Amazon has a track record of fulfilling their compliance obligations.Compliance doesn’t hinge on superstition. It hinges on audits, certifications, contracts, and the legal environment. throw1234567891 3 hours ago That’s not the point.
kube-system 4 hours ago Because the platform is designed to send data to numerous different backend data processors.Using something like Bedrock is a lot easier for compliance because the only processor is Amazon. joquarky 3 hours ago Amazon would never do anything nefarious. kube-system 3 hours ago Amazon has a track record of fulfilling their compliance obligations.Compliance doesn’t hinge on superstition. It hinges on audits, certifications, contracts, and the legal environment. throw1234567891 3 hours ago That’s not the point.
joquarky 3 hours ago Amazon would never do anything nefarious. kube-system 3 hours ago Amazon has a track record of fulfilling their compliance obligations.Compliance doesn’t hinge on superstition. It hinges on audits, certifications, contracts, and the legal environment. throw1234567891 3 hours ago That’s not the point.
kube-system 3 hours ago Amazon has a track record of fulfilling their compliance obligations.Compliance doesn’t hinge on superstition. It hinges on audits, certifications, contracts, and the legal environment.
Because the platform is designed to send data to numerous different backend data processors.
Using something like Bedrock is a lot easier for compliance because the only processor is Amazon.
Amazon would never do anything nefarious.
Amazon has a track record of fulfilling their compliance obligations.
Compliance doesn’t hinge on superstition. It hinges on audits, certifications, contracts, and the legal environment.
That’s not the point.