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Nano-policy is a data risk insuring contract that exists no longer than a few hundred milliseconds in real-time, over the Internet, and represents a risk transfer agreement as a 'risk packet".
It was developed by envisioning data valuation and classification of data in-flight (TCP/IP) over the Internet with 'transit life' measuring 500+ ms or less in duration. Also, a very small insurance policy does not translate into a very small cover or limit. In some instances, the potential cover or insurance claim limit exposure to risk could be translated into as much as a billion times the overall policy's insuring cost or premium. (this phenomenon is an algorithm of large numbers vs. small numbers over time)
The dynamic risk insuring process assigns unique risk signatures to each data object, which can be classified and time-date stamped. The nano-policy in the risk insuring process provides for the different transmission environments when electronic data flows between ports and the cloud of the Internet, pointing to risk segmentation. These nano-policies produce higher granular risk metrics enabling higher real-time signal output--eventually resulting in more accurate detection (better loss control) and analysis of data risk in-motion and data risk at rest.
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