Compliance is built into the runtime — not bolted on as a disclaimer.
This platform is not a scrape-anything crawler. Every job begins with an approved niche order, only approved sources are used, only allowed fields are stored, and prohibited data is rejected or routed to review before it is ever published.
Seven guardrails
How every record stays compliant.
Source Governance
Every job begins with an approved niche order. Only explicitly approved sources run. Blocked domains, login-walled, paywalled, CAPTCHA, and anti-bot sources are ineligible by design.
PII Rejection
Consumer PII is rejected before storage. Personal emails, phone numbers, and sensitive attributes reject the record; bare individual names are generalized to a corporate/registered-individual label.
Copyright Isolation
We never store copied paragraphs or descriptions. Only uncopyrightable facts are kept, and summaries are synthesized from those facts — never lifted from a source page.
Rate-Limited Collection
Courtesy throttling caps requests per domain, forbids same-domain parallelism, and backs off on errors. We collect like a considerate guest, not a firehose.
Review Queue
Low-confidence or policy-flagged records route to human review instead of being published. Risky data is held, not shipped.
Provenance Logs
Every record carries its source, retrieval time, and confidence. Every gate decision is written to an immutable compliance log — with no PII in the log itself.
Access Control
The free/premium boundary is enforced server-side at the API and database layer. Locked data never reaches the browser; the storefront is presentation only.
An honest word on risk.
No architecture is “zero risk” or automatically legal. What this design does is push compliance to the earliest possible point, keep humans in the loop for edge cases, and make the safe path the default path. Each production niche still receives a source and legal review before launch.
Buying cautiously? Good.
Enterprise engagements include a source-governance review and access to compliance logs.