$10T Supply Chain: Microsoft, Tech Against Trafficking, and Primary-Data Compliance
Microsoft, Source Intelligence, and Sayari present the case for moving beyond probabilistic supply chain mapping to verified, primary-data traceability that meets the requirements of UFLPA, EUDR, and the newly released Tech Against Trafficking (TAT) standards.
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Presumption
Standard
A $10 trillion AI buildout. A hardware supply chain that compliance programs weren’t designed for.
AI infrastructure investment is projected to exceed $10 trillion over the next decade. The hardware that powers that investment — semiconductors, rare earth components, finished devices — passes through supply chains of extraordinary complexity. Dozens of handoffs. Hundreds of sub-suppliers. Materials originating in regions that regulators around the world are actively scrutinizing.
The U.S. Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) creates a rebuttable presumption of forced labor for goods with inputs from certain regions, placing the burden of proof on importers — not enforcement agencies. The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) requires verified due diligence on supply chains for covered commodities. The EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) extends mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence obligations across large enterprises operating in Europe.
This session explores the transition from inferred, gap-prone networks to transparency through primary data — and what that means for compliance programs operating under current regulatory requirements.
UFLPA
Creates a rebuttable presumption of forced labor for goods with inputs from certain regions. The burden of proof falls on importers. Verified provenance is required — probabilistic mapping is not sufficient to rebut.
EUDR
Requires verified due diligence on supply chains for covered commodities. Documentation of origin must be traceable, defensible, and current under regulatory review.
EU CSDDD
Extends mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence obligations across large enterprises operating in Europe — requiring documented traceability, not self-reported compliance.
What you will learn
A dedicated session of practitioner-focused content. Here’s what we’ll cover on April 29th:
Precision Risk Targeting: Moving Beyond Broad Supplier Surveys
How to use integrated corporate ownership and trade data to identify the specific branches of a supply chain that present the highest regulatory and ethical risk — without manual outreach at scale.
The Power of Data Triangulation: Building a Layered Compliance Picture
Strategies for layering external intelligence (corporate ownership, sanctions, trade flows) over internal product data to gain visibility into the “invisible middle tiers” of the supply chain.
Solving Supplier Fatigue: From Repetitive Requests to Interoperable Data
The operational case for replacing manual questionnaire cycles with structured, standardized data flows — so supplier submissions satisfy multiple downstream requirements simultaneously.
The TAT Traceability Standard: Inside the New Industry Baseline
An inside look at the Tech Against Trafficking (TAT) traceability framework — what it requires, why the world’s largest technology companies developed it collaboratively, and what it means for your program.
From Entities to Items: A Live Demonstration
How Sayari Guide and Source Intelligence work together in a unified workflow — from entity screening and ownership mapping to full material declaration review and compliance verification.
Built for senior compliance practitioners
Chief Compliance Officers, Supply Chain Risk Managers, procurement leads, and sustainability professionals at companies that source, manufacture, or sell physical products — especially in technology, electronics, and industrial sectors.
What primary-data traceability sees that probabilistic mapping doesn’t.
Practitioners building the new standard.
A practitioner conversation led by the teams at the world’s largest technology companies who are defining what supply chain traceability looks like for the industry.
Everything you need to know
Common questions about the session, the regulatory landscape, and the methodology.
See how entity intelligence and product data work together.
Join Microsoft, Source Intelligence, Tech Against Trafficking, and Sayari on April 29th for a practitioner conversation on the next era of supply chain traceability.