Lucid Computing — Description: Startup building hardware-rooted zero-trust verification platform for AI compute using TEEs (Intel TDX, NVIDIA H100 Confidential Computing). Products include AI Passports for cryptographic certification, compliance marketplace, and Digital Embassies for sovereign AI infrastructure.
All major components of the claim are directly supported by the source text. The source explicitly mentions Intel TDX and NVIDIA H100 confidential computing, describes AI Passports as cryptographic proof, references a compliance marketplace with specific regulatory modules, and emphasizes sovereign AI infrastructure. The company describes itself as building a platform for verifiable AI with hardware-rooted security. The only element not explicitly labeled 'Digital Embassies' in the source, but the concept of sovereign infrastructure and jurisdiction-specific deployment (e.g., 'US Jurisdiction Verified', 'Data Sovereignty Lock') aligns with this description. The claim's date (2026-03) cannot be verified from the source, but this is the current website content and appears to be the company's current positioning.
Our claim
entire record- Subject
- Lucid Computing
- Property
- Description
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- Startup building hardware-rooted zero-trust verification platform for AI compute using TEEs (Intel TDX, NVIDIA H100 Confidential Computing). Products include AI Passports for cryptographic certification, compliance marketplace, and Digital Embassies for sovereign AI infrastructure.
- As Of
- March 2026
Source evidence
1 src · 1 checkNoteAll major components of the claim are directly supported by the source text. The source explicitly mentions Intel TDX and NVIDIA H100 confidential computing, describes AI Passports as cryptographic proof, references a compliance marketplace with specific regulatory modules, and emphasizes sovereign AI infrastructure. The company describes itself as building a platform for verifiable AI with hardware-rooted security. The only element not explicitly labeled 'Digital Embassies' in the source, but the concept of sovereign infrastructure and jurisdiction-specific deployment (e.g., 'US Jurisdiction Verified', 'Data Sovereignty Lock') aligns with this description. The claim's date (2026-03) cannot be verified from the source, but this is the current website content and appears to be the company's current positioning.