Updated June 1, 2026
TL;DR: Most general-purpose AI observability tools optimize for developer debugging: latency, token usage, and error rates. Regulated enterprises need something structurally different: observability that captures security events, enforces framework-mapped policies at the system level, and generates audit logs inside your own infrastructure. Vendor-hosted AI logging creates data sovereignty risks that are unacceptable for manufacturing, financial services, and defense-adjacent environments. The defensible choice is a self-hosted control plane that forwards structured, Security Information and Event Management (SIEM)-ready evidence directly to Splunk, Datadog, or your existing log management system, without audit data transiting a vendor's servers.
Most general-purpose AI observability tools were built for developers debugging in development environments: they measure response time, token cost, and error rates. That's useful for engineering, but it doesn't capture the events a security or compliance team needs to defend a decision in an audit.
Security teams preparing for a regulatory examination need something they can't get from a system health or usage dashboard: a complete, structured evidence package showing which models or agents processed which data, under which policies, and when. Engineering teams are deploying AI agents faster than governance processes can capture them, and that gap between deployment speed and governance maturity is where audit findings are born.
This article evaluates AI observability platforms based on their ability to deliver audit-ready evidence to your SIEM, with particular attention to Prediction Guard's self-hosted control plane architecture.
Traditional IT monitoring answers one question: is the system running? AI observability for security answers a different and harder question: is the system running under documented control? The distinction matters because AI systems introduce nondeterministic behavior that infrastructure monitoring cannot capture. An agent receiving the same input twice may route through different tools and produce different outputs. Every unique interaction path is a unique audit record, and developer performance dashboards aggregate that granularity away.
Three capabilities distinguish security-focused AI observability from developer monitoring:
Developer-centric tools optimize for speed of iteration. Security-centric observability optimizes for defensibility. These are different design goals, and they produce different architectures.
Regulated data cannot transit external observability APIs. Any observability tool that sends prompt logs or model outputs to a vendor's cloud infrastructure creates a residency violation risk before the first audit cycle begins.
AI governance evidence belongs in the same system your security team already uses to investigate, escalate, and respond. Logs must reach Splunk, Datadog, or a generic syslog target (whether self-hosted or cloud-deployed, depending on your data residency requirements) in a format so your security team can query compliance evidence directly from your existing log management infrastructure, reducing, though not necessarily eliminating, the filtering and formatting steps typically required before evidence is audit-ready. Audit-ready event schemas include fields for AI governance policy identifiers, framework mapping tags (NIST AI RMF function, OWASP item, NIST 600-1 action ID, ISO 42001 clause, AIUC-1 control), user or agent identifiers, and decision outcomes.
The self-hosted sovereignty overview shows how this architecture works in practice.
An AI governance policy documented in a wiki isn't a control. A policy enforced at the API level across every model interaction, regardless of which developer wrote the calling code, is a control. System-level enforcement means the governance logic runs inside your infrastructure, making compliance the default outcome for every model interaction regardless of developer choice. Bypass requires intentional override rather than simple omission, which significantly reduces the risk of unintentional non-compliance under delivery pressure.
No governance architecture eliminates risk entirely, but system-level enforcement raises the barrier significantly above what advisory-only controls can achieve, making unintentional bypass the exception rather than the default. When a log field carries a NIST AI RMF function tag or an OWASP item code, that structured metadata enables compliance teams to trace events back to specific controls. But the NIST AI RMF provides governance structure, not enforcement, so the tags create the conditions for evidence collection rather than automatically producing it. Turning tagged log data into usable audit evidence still requires integrating those tags into your findings workflow and validating them against the relevant checklist or control requirement.
Vendor-hosted observability is faster to deploy for teams in early exploration mode. For regulated enterprises, the trade-off is unacceptable: logs leave your perimeter, jurisdiction becomes ambiguous, and your evidence trail depends on a vendor's retention policies. A self-hosted control plane sits on the other side of that line. It runs inside your environment whether that environment is your own cloud VPC, your own on-premises hardware, or an air-gapped network. Self-hosted does not mean anti-cloud. It means the governance logic, policy evaluation, and audit log generation all stay inside your control boundary regardless of where you choose to run the infrastructure. The Prediction Guard video series EP02: air-gapped AI addresses this architecture choice directly for manufacturing and logistics environments.
A control plane generates audit logs. Your SIEM stores and retains them. These are two separate functions, and conflating them creates a compliance gap. Governance logic runs inside your environment, logs are generated inside your environment, and your SIEM takes custody of the evidence. The vendor never touches the log.
When an external vendor stores your prompt logs, you inherit their security posture. Under the CLOUD Act (Clarifying Lawful Overseas Use of Data Act, 2018), providers subject to U.S. jurisdiction can be compelled via legal process to produce data within their possession regardless of where that data is physically stored. For CUI, ITAR, or sensitive financial workloads, that distinction is not academic. If the evidence trail lives in a vendor's infrastructure, your ability to produce it for a regulator depends on that vendor's availability, cooperation, and retention policies. Self-hosted control planes eliminate that dependency. The hidden risks of externally-hosted AI apply equally to observability tools that store logs outside your perimeter.
Prediction Guard's self-hosted control plane generates structured audit logs and forwards detection events natively into Splunk and Datadog, with generic syslog forwarding available for other targets. The structured log payload includes AI governance policy violation details and agent-level identifiers. Mapping tables in Prediction Guard documentation link those events to NIST AI RMF functions and OWASP items. The control plane overview demonstrates how this architecture works end-to-end for high-trust environments.
Three forwarding requirements to evaluate:
Observability infrastructure should support multiple governance frameworks rather than being purpose-built for one. Auditors in different industries and jurisdictions reference different frameworks: NIST AI RMF for U.S. federal and federal-adjacent work, NIST 600-1 for adversarial machine learning controls, OWASP LLM Top Ten and OWASP Top 10 for Agentic Applications for security-led reviews, ISO/IEC 42001 for AI management system certification, AIUC-1 for AI-specific control crosswalks, and sector frameworks like CMMC for defense suppliers. A well-designed control plane lets a single audit log support all of them by carrying framework-tagged metadata on every event.
|
NIST AI RMF Function |
OWASP Coverage |
NIST 600-1 / ISO 42001 / AIUC-1 Cross-Reference |
Observability Capabilities |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Govern |
Foundational across LLM Top 10 |
ISO 42001 §5–§9 (leadership, planning, support); AIUC-1 governance controls |
AI governance policy configuration, enforcement logging, accountability records |
|
Map |
ASI04 (Agent inventory) |
ISO 42001 §6.1 (risk and opportunities); NIST 600-1 mapping actions |
AI System registration, AIBOM export, dependency tracking |
|
Measure |
LLM01, LLM06, LLM08, LLM09 |
NIST 600-1 measure actions (MS-2.x series); AIUC-1 B/C/D controls |
Structured event logs, policy violation rates, model interaction records |
|
Manage |
LLM01, ASI01 (multi-agent) |
NIST 600-1 measure actions (MG-2.x series); AIUC-1 incident response controls |
Real-time alerting, SIEM forwarding, incident response evidence |
OWASP (Open Web Application Security Project) LLM Top Ten maps directly to specific observability requirements. LLM01 (Prompt Injection) requires input validation monitoring and injection detection at the API level. LLM06 (Sensitive Information Disclosure) requires PII scanning and output monitoring with structured evidence. LLM08 (Excessive Agency) requires tool call monitoring and policy enforcement on agentic actions. For multi-agent deployments, the OWASP agentic applications framework extends these requirements to inter-agent handshakes.
The Prediction Guard video series EP04: practical OWASP implementation covers applying these controls in production. The AIUC-1 crosswalks resource provides further mapping across these frameworks for teams building evidence documentation.
CMMC Level 2 requires audit records sufficient to support after-the-fact investigations. NIST SP 800-171 Rev 2 requirement 3.3.1, which underpins CMMC Level 2, specifies that audit logs must be retained for a period sufficient to support after-the-fact investigation, with no specific retention period mandated. 90 days is widely cited in practice as an active log availability baseline, with longer-term archival for retained records. The CMMC Audit and Accountability requirements mandate detailed logs tracking who accessed Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI), when, and what actions were taken. An AI system processing CUI must generate logs that satisfy that specification, not just logs that record inference requests. Organizations with multi-jurisdiction exposure additionally need observability infrastructure that meets the EU AI Act's six-month retention floor for high-risk AI systems alongside domestic sector requirements, without manual reconciliation between separate logging systems.
The right AI observability tool depends on where your data has to stay and which frameworks your auditors reference. AWS Bedrock Guardrails and Azure AI Content Safety are vendor-hosted services with control planes anchored in their respective cloud infrastructure: AWS (CloudWatch / CloudTrail) and Azure (Monitor / Log Analytics), both vendor-managed. They enforce input and output AI governance policies as a feature of their respective hyperscaler stacks. For regulated workloads subject to ITAR, CMMC, or strict data residency requirements, logs stored in a hyperscaler's managed services layer present the same sovereignty concerns as any vendor-hosted approach.
True governance platform comparables include Noma Security (AI security posture management, primarily oriented toward externally connected enterprise environments rather than air-gapped or strict data-perimeter sovereignty), WitnessAI (AI governance and activity monitoring, with self-hosted deployment options), HiddenLayer (AI and machine learning model security, focused on adversarial threat detection), Varonis Atlas (data security platform with AI-driven classification and access governance), and TrueFoundry (MLOps and AI deployment platform with built-in governance and compliance controls). Contrast those architectures against your data sovereignty requirements before evaluating features.
A third-party observability vendor introduces a new data pathway outside your perimeter for every AI interaction it monitors. A self-hosted control plane eliminates that pathway: governance logic runs inside your own infrastructure, and logs are forwarded to your SIEM through your configured integration. Regulated enterprises often need custom schema fields as well, such as user identity, query, response, and timestamp fields required for ITAR-compliant audit logging in defense environments, trader and transaction identifiers for financial services audit and exception reporting, or asset and sensor identifiers for manufacturing operational monitoring. An observability control plane that supports custom schema fields without vendor configuration changes gives your compliance team the flexibility to satisfy your auditor's specific evidence requirements.
AI governance policy configuration belongs in your governance infrastructure, not embedded in individual developer codebases. The Govern page of the Prediction Guard Admin Console is where security and GRC teams configure AI governance policies: prompt injection filtering, PII redaction rules, and toxicity detection, alongside other detection controls available within the platform. Developers point their existing OpenAI-compatible or Anthropic-compatible SDK calls at the control plane endpoint, and those policies enforce on every request automatically.
When engineering teams deploy AI integrations faster than governance processes can capture them, evidence collection becomes a bottleneck. Fragmented evidence collection, with logs distributed across disconnected vendor portals, separate cloud dashboards, and inconsistent export formats, creates reconciliation overhead that automated, centralized SIEM forwarding is specifically designed to eliminate. Automated, continuous log forwarding to your SIEM means the compliance evidence package exists before an audit is scheduled. The golden path for AI infrastructure covers how structured governance reduces manual interpretation across an audit cycle. Audit readiness becomes a byproduct of good system-level architecture rather than a parallel project that runs alongside your deployment.
Book a deployment scoping call to assess whether self-hosted deployment fits your infrastructure and compliance requirements.
Yes. Native integrations for Splunk and Datadog are widely used for compliance-oriented log management, and generic syslog forwarding should support other major SIEM targets. Logs that don't reach your existing security operations workflow can't feed an active incident response or compliance evidence program.
Logs are generated by the control plane inside your environment and retained entirely within your own SIEM or log management infrastructure. No audit data should be stored on the vendor's servers, and the control plane should generate structured logs without requiring any data to leave your defined perimeter.
Request a structured mapping document that links specific product capabilities to named NIST AI RMF functions (Govern, Map, Measure, Manage), specific OWASP item numbers, NIST 600-1 action IDs, ISO 42001 clauses, and AIUC-1 controls as applicable to your regulatory context. A general compliance claim without an itemized mapping is not verifiable by your auditor.
Self-hosted deployments inside your own cloud VPC, on your own hardware, or in an air-gapped environment ensure data never crosses your defined perimeter. Third-party observability vendors cannot offer equivalent sovereignty regardless of contractual terms, because legal compulsion operates on physical possession, not contract language.
AI observability: The practice of monitoring, understanding, and troubleshooting what an AI system does end-to-end, from inputs through agent actions to outputs, with structured evidence suitable for compliance and security review.
AIBOM (AI Bill of Materials): A structured inventory of every model, dataset, MCP server, and external dependency in an AI system, exportable in CycloneDX format (an industry-standard schema for software and AI bill of materials documents) for auditors and regulators.
CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information): Unclassified information that requires safeguarding or dissemination controls pursuant to federal law, regulation, or government policy.
Data sovereignty: The principle that data, governance logic, and audit logs remain inside the organization's own infrastructure and jurisdiction, never transiting a third-party vendor's systems.
ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations): U.S. regulations that control the export and import of defense-related articles and services, requiring deliberate architectural controls for U.S.-person access and tenant isolation.
LLM (Large Language Model): An AI model trained on large amounts of text data to generate human-like text responses and perform language-based tasks.
MCP (Model Context Protocol) server: A server component that manages context and state for AI model interactions, often used in agent architectures for coordinating tool calls and external integrations.
OWASP (Open Web Application Security Project): A nonprofit foundation that works to improve software security through community-led open-source projects, including security frameworks for AI applications.
PII (Personally Identifiable Information): Information that can be used to identify, contact, or locate a single person, or to identify an individual in context.
SIEM (Security Information and Event Management): A security solution that provides real-time analysis of security alerts generated by applications and network hardware, used for centralized logging, monitoring, and compliance reporting.
System-level enforcement: The application of governance policies at the API or control-plane layer across every model interaction, enforced automatically regardless of which developer wrote the calling code, as distinct from advisory guidelines that depend on individual compliance.