Governance evidence
Use for control statements that cite ISO/IEC 42001 clause 6.3 change management, EU AI Act Articles 62–75, and SOC 2 trust service criteria.
Having infrastructure is one thing. Running it well is another entirely. This module covers the practices that separate “it works” from “it works reliably.”
Controls stack visual kit
Reusable icons and a telemetry-to-audit diagram aligned to our fundamentals and operational guides.
Use for control statements that cite ISO/IEC 42001 clause 6.3 change management, EU AI Act Articles 62–75, and SOC 2 trust service criteria.
Pair with SBOM, provenance, and intake guidance that references SPDX or CycloneDX formats, SLSA Level 3 attestations, and NIST SSDF tasks PS.3/PO.4.
Highlight logging of prompts, responses, refusal rates, and safety filters alongside adversarial evaluation suites from NIST AI RMF playbooks or UK AISI guidance.
Use for incident response and assurance artefacts that must meet OMB M-24-10 24-hour notifications, CIRCIA’s 72-hour clocks, and serious-incident duties under the EU AI Act.
Great infrastructure teams are proactive, not reactive. They automate routine work so they have time for improvements. They build systems that alert them to problems before they become outages. They learn from every incident. This doesn’t happen by accident—it takes deliberate investment in tools, processes, and culture.
You’ve covered a lot of ground. You now understand the building blocks of IT infrastructure, from physical data centres to cloud services to the practices that keep everything running. Here’s where to go from here.