By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
Reading: I helped design rocket engines for NASA’s space shuttles. Here’s why businesses need AI as trustworthy as aerospace tech
Notification Show More
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • Categories
    • World News
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Celebrity
    • Business
    • Crypto
    • Tech News
    • Gaming News
    • Travel
  • Bookmarks
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Viraltrendingcontent
Viral Trending content > Blog > Business > I helped design rocket engines for NASA’s space shuttles. Here’s why businesses need AI as trustworthy as aerospace tech
Business

I helped design rocket engines for NASA’s space shuttles. Here’s why businesses need AI as trustworthy as aerospace tech

By Viral Trending Content 8 Min Read
Share
SHARE

Contents
Founding a business based on trustYou wouldn’t launch an untested rocket

When I was an aerospace engineer working on the NASA Space Shuttle Program, trust was mission-critical. Every bolt, every line of code, every system had to be validated and tested carefully, or the shuttle would never leave the launchpad. After their missions, astronauts would walk through the office and thank the thousands of engineers for getting them back home safely to their families—that’s how deeply ingrained trust and safety were in our systems. 

Despite the “move fast and break things” rhetoric, tech should be no different. New technologies need to build trust before they can accelerate growth.

By 2027, about 50% of enterprises are expected to deploy AI agents, and a McKinsey report forecasts that by 2030, as much as 30% of all work could be carried out by AI agents. Many of the cybersecurity leaders I speak with are looking to bring in AI as fast as they can to enable the business, but also recognize that they need to ensure these integrations are done safely and securely with the right guardrails in place.

For AI to fulfill its promise, business leaders need to trust AI. That won’t happen on its own. Security leaders must take a lesson from aerospace engineering and build trust into their processes from day one—or risk missing out on the business growth it accelerates.

The relationship between trust and growth is not theoretical. I’ve lived it.

Founding a business based on trust

After NASA’s Space Shuttle program ended, I founded my first company: a platform for professionals and students to showcase and share evidence of their skills and competencies. It was a simple idea, but one that demanded that our customers trusted us. We quickly discovered universities wouldn’t partner with us until we proved we could handle sensitive student data securely. That meant providing assurance through a number of different avenues, including showing a clean SOC 2 attestation, answering long security questionnaires, and completing various compliance certifications through painstakingly manual processes.

That experience shaped the founding of Drata, where my cofounders and I set out to build the trust layer between great companies. By helping GRC leaders and their companies gain and prove their security posture to customers, partners, and auditors, we remove friction and accelerate growth. Our rapid trajectory from $1 million to $100 million in annual recurring revenue in just a few years is proof that businesses are seeing the value, and slowly starting to shift from viewing GRC teams as a cost center to a business enabler. That translates to real, tangible results–we’ve seen $18 billion in security influenced revenue with security teams using our SafeBase Trust Center. 

Now, with AI, the stakes are even higher.

Today’s compliance frameworks and regulations — like SOC 2, ISO 27001, and GDPR — were designed for data privacy and security, not for AI systems that generate text, make decisions, or act autonomously. 

Thanks to legislation like California’s newly enacted AI safety standards, regulators are slowly starting to catch up. But waiting for new rules and regulations isn’t enough—particularly as businesses rely on new AI technologies to stay ahead. 

You wouldn’t launch an untested rocket

In many ways, this moment reminds me of the work I did at NASA. As an aerospace engineer, I never “tested in production.” Every shuttle mission was a meticulously planned operation. 

Deploying AI without understanding and acknowledging its risk is like launching an untested rocket: the damage can be immediate and end in catastrophic failure. Just as a failed space mission can reduce the trust people have in NASA, a misstep in the use of AI, without fully understanding the risk or applying guardrails, can reduce the trust consumers put in that organization. 

What we need now is a new trust operating system. To operationalize trust, leaders should create a program that is:

  1. Transparent. In aerospace engineering, exhaustive documentation isn’t bureaucracy, but a force for accountability. The same applies to AI and trust. There needs to be traceability—from policy to control to evidence to attestation.
  2. Continuous. Just as NASA is continuously monitoring its missions around-the clock, businesses must invest in trust as a continuous and ongoing process rather than a point-in-time checkbox. Controls, for example, need to be continuously monitored so that audit readiness becomes more a state of being, and not a last minute sprint.
  3. Autonomous. Rocket engines today can manage their own operation through embedded computers, sensors, and control loops, without pilots or ground crew directly adjusting valves mid-flight. And as AI becomes a more prevalent part of everyday business, this must also be true of our trust programs. If humans, agents, and automated workflows are going to transact, they have to be able to validate trust on their own, deterministically, and without ambiguity.

When I think back to my aerospace days, what stands out is not just the complexity of space missions, but their interdependence. Tens of thousands of components, built by different teams, have to function together perfectly. Each team trusts that others are doing their work effectively, and decisions are documented to ensure transparency across the organization. In other words, trust was the layer that held the entire space shuttle program together.

The same is true for AI today, especially as we enter this budding era of agentic AI. We’re shifting to a new way of business, with hundreds—someday thousands—of agents, humans, and systems all continuously interacting with one another, generating tens of thousands of touch points. The tools are powerful and the opportunities vast, but only if we’re able to earn and sustain trust in every interaction. Companies that create a culture of transparent, continuous, autonomous trust will lead the next wave of innovation. 

The future of AI is already under construction. The question is simple: will you build it on trust?

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business. Apply for an invitation.

You Might Also Like

Huge Westminster HQ sells at 65% discount

Infosys' Rs 18,000 crore share buyback window to open on Nov 20. 5 things to know

‘Bond King’ Jeffrey Gundlach warns of the next financial crisis: ‘It has the same trappings as subprime mortgage repackaging in 2006’

Meme coin news: DOGE ETF update, LIBRA rallies 80%, Shibarium transactions skyrocket

Meta prevails in historic FTC antitrust case, won’t have to break off WhatsApp, Instagram

TAGGED: bbc business, Business, business ideas, business insider, Business News, business plan, google my business, income, money, opportunity, small business, small business idea
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Why Elon Musk’s SpaceX transferred $133M in Bitcoin
Next Article European Union seeks to end dependency on China for rare earths
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

AAVE could dip below $150 despite the Aave App launch
Crypto
Bitcoin Hits Seven-Month Low, El Salvador Scoops Up Another $100M, Is This The Right Bet?
Crypto
Meet Gemini 3: The Google AI that could change everything
World News
Sneaky 2FA Phishing Kit Adds BitB Pop-ups Designed to Mimic the Browser Address Bar
Tech News
Huge Westminster HQ sells at 65% discount
Business
EU could hand Amazon, Microsoft ‘gatekeeper’ title for cloud services
Tech News
Blaze in Croatian capital Zagreb destroys landmark 16-storey Vjesnik news tower
World News

About Us

Welcome to Viraltrendingcontent, your go-to source for the latest updates on world news, politics, sports, celebrity, tech, travel, gaming, crypto news, and business news. We are dedicated to providing you with accurate, timely, and engaging content from around the globe.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
  • Sports
  • Crypto
  • Tech News
  • Gaming News
  • Travel

Trending News

cageside seats

Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024

AAVE could dip below $150 despite the Aave App launch

Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!

cageside seats
Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024
May 22, 2024
AAVE could dip below $150 despite the Aave App launch
November 19, 2025
Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!
March 27, 2024
Brussels unveils plans for a European Degree but struggles to explain why
March 27, 2024
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Vraltrendingcontent
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?