Framecast has achieved SOC 2 certification, completing an independent examination of the controls that protect its customers' data. The certification was earned with the support of MyCroft, a fellow Antler portfolio company specializing in security and compliance.
This marks a significant milestone for Framecast and reflects the company's early commitment to data security. Rather than bolting controls on after the fact, the team built its security foundation in from the start — isolated processing, encryption in transit and at rest, strict access controls, and full audit trails — so that confidential deal data is protected at every step.
It matters because of what Framecast handles. The platform works with the most sensitive material in a transaction: data rooms, rent rolls, leases, operating statements, and the models built from them. SOC 2 provides independent, third-party assurance that the controls safeguarding that data are designed appropriately and operating effectively over time.
MyCroft, also backed by Antler, partnered with Framecast through the process — bringing compliance automation and security expertise that helped the team prepare for and pass the examination efficiently. It is the kind of portfolio collaboration that lets a fast-moving company meet an enterprise-grade bar early.
For the institutional teams running deals on Framecast, the certification formalizes commitments the company has held from the beginning: customer data is never used to train shared or foundation models, it is never exposed to other customers, and every action is traceable. SOC 2 is a milestone, not a finish line — Framecast will continue to invest in the security its customers' trust depends on.
“Our customers hand us their most sensitive deal data. Earning that trust starts with proving, independently, that we protect it — and we wanted to clear that bar early.”
About Framecast
Framecast is secure, collaborative AI for commercial real estate diligence. It turns a raw data room into clean, institutional-grade models, analyses, and workflows — with every figure traceable to its source — so teams spend their time on judgment, not data entry.