that would be implying that "private" really means anything for AWS. Because if it's "private" as in "private" github repos that were totally not used for training copilot because they said so or "private" claude chats that are totally scanned even if you have enterprise contracts to check you are not doing anything malicious or are from china or whatever, and this will totally not be used for training...

can we trust any US based service to guarantee privacy and confidentiality? especially to us european frienemies?

> that would be implying that "private" really means anything for AWS

Insert your dedicated hosting provider of choice for 'AWS' (somewhere like Hetzner will be cheaper anyway).

But in general, AWS hosts are yours, running your code, with your security policies enforced. Sure, the US government can silently subpoena the contents thereof, but aside from that fairly extreme case, it's not like AWS is handing your data over to 3rd parties.