The "security and compliance crisis" that has sent shockwaves through the artificial intelligence infrastructure sector saw the latest developments today. Popular global AI gateway developer LiteLLM officially announced the termination of all cooperation with compliance startup Delve , and plans to re-undergo security certification through a competitor.
Core Event Recap
The trigger for this split was the severe credential-stealing malware attack suffered by the LiteLLM open-source version last week. Prior to the attack, LiteLLM had relied on Delve's compliance services to obtain two key security certifications. However, Delve has recently been embroiled in a serious integrity crisis, accused of misleading clients into a false sense of compliance with weak security protections by fabricating data and hiring auditors who provided "cursory sign-offs".
Positions and Developments
Although the founder of Delve publicly **denied the allegations** and promised to provide free re-inspections, evidence subsequently released by an anonymous whistleblower further fueled public discourse.
Faced with this dual blow to security and trust, LiteLLM's Chief Technology Officer Ishaan Jaffer clarified the company's stance today via a social platform:
Immediate Severance: Completely halt all cooperation with Delve.
Re-certification: Commission Delve's main competitor, Vanta , to restart the certification process.
Enhanced Auditing: Hire an independent third-party auditing firm to conduct in-depth validation of compliance controls.
Industry Impact
As a benchmark AI gateway with millions of developers, LiteLLM's "drastic move to save itself" reflects the AI industry's high sensitivity to the authenticity of compliance. Under the shadow of the credential theft attack, companies are shifting from merely pursuing "paper compliance" to seeking genuine technical security verification.








