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Keto-Mojo earns ISO/IEC 27001 certification to protect user data

Keto-Mojo said its glucose and ketone ecosystem now carries ISO/IEC 27001 certification, signaling tighter safeguards for sensitive health data.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Keto-Mojo earns ISO/IEC 27001 certification to protect user data
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Sensitive glucose and ketone readings can reveal far more than macros, which is why Keto-Mojo’s new ISO/IEC 27001 certification lands as a trust signal, not a technical footnote. The company said on June 11 that it had achieved the international information-security standard, a move aimed squarely at people who sync metabolic data through devices and apps as part of keto, diabetes, or clinical routines.

ISO/IEC 27001 is best understood as a formal blueprint for how a company handles information security. For users, that means Keto-Mojo is signaling documented controls, risk management, and a structured approach to protecting personal data. It does not mean every risk disappears, and it should not be read as a promise that any system is untouchable. What it does suggest is that the company has put its security practices under a recognized external framework instead of leaving privacy to informal promises.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Keto-Mojo said the certification was carried out by A-LIGN, which describes itself as a technology-enabled security and compliance partner trusted by more than 4,000 global organizations. A-LIGN also says it is accredited by the ANSI National Accreditation Board and the United Kingdom Accreditation Service to perform ISO/IEC 27001 certification services. That matters because the assessor itself has to meet credentialing standards before it can hand out a certification that so many health-tech companies now use as shorthand for serious governance.

The timing also fits the way Keto-Mojo has positioned itself in the keto and metabolic-health world. The company describes its products as FDA-cleared blood glucose and ketone meters, and says the system is CE-marked for use by people with diabetes at home in the United States, Canada, the European Union, and South Africa, as well as by healthcare professionals in clinical settings in the EU and South Africa. Its shop says the products are built for diabetics and people on the ketogenic diet and can help calculate GKI, the glucose ketone index.

That security push makes more sense when you look at the brand’s origin story. Keto-Mojo says its lifestyle story began in 2015, when co-founder Dorian Greenow said he weighed more than 207 pounds, felt constantly tired, was on antidepressants, and had nearly all the markers for metabolic syndrome before adopting keto. Virta Health later reported that Greenow and Gemma Kochis took out a second mortgage to launch the company, and that their first product was the first affordable system to track blood glucose and ketone levels. With Keto-Mojo’s privacy policy identifying the company as a data controller for personal information collected through its services, the certification turns a long-running promise into a more concrete security posture. In quantified keto, trust now has to travel with the numbers.

Every story on Keto Diet Magazine is assembled by an automated editorial system that works from verified research, official records, and credible reporting, then clears automated accuracy and moderation checks before it goes live. The standards that system follows are set and overseen by the people who run the publication. Read our full editorial policy.

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