AI features visible but no public AI policy / governance / disclosure page
Your site appears to use AI-powered features, but there is no publicly accessible page explaining how AI is used, what data it processes, and how decisions are made. An AI policy or governance disclosure covers these questions. Privacy regulators increasingly treat AI processing of personal data as a distinct activity that requires its own legal basis and, in many cases, explicit consent or a clear opt-out. Enterprise procurement teams and B2B buyers are also starting to ask for evidence of this. Relying on a generic cookie policy is unlikely to satisfy either requirement. Publish a short AI policy page (or a section within your privacy policy) that explains: which features use AI, what data those features process, whether any automated decisions are made, and how users can opt out or raise concerns.
Why this matters
Privacy regulators increasingly treat AI processing of personal data as a distinct activity that requires its own legal basis and, in many cases, explicit consent or a clear opt-out. Enterprise procurement teams and B2B buyers are also starting to ask for evidence of this. Relying on a generic cookie policy is unlikely to satisfy either requirement.
How to fix it
Publish a short AI policy page (or a section within your privacy policy) that explains: which features use AI, what data those features process, whether any automated decisions are made, and how users can opt out or raise concerns.