Apple App Store Guideline 5.1.2(i)
Apple clarified that apps must disclose where personal data is shared with third parties, including third-party AI, and obtain explicit permission before doing so.
EU AI Act · App Store review · US chatbot laws
From August 2, 2026 the EU AI Act brings AI transparency duties online. US state chatbot laws are moving too, and mobile apps have app-store review expectations around AI data sharing. Add a clear AI disclosure to your web, iOS or Android app in minutes, then keep a dated record you can show if you're ever asked.
Not just a web badge — AI disclosure that ships in your app and tracks EU + US rules.
Drop‑in web notice today. Mobile implementation guidance now; mobile SDK only if validation says go.
Answer four questions. We'll show you what your app likely needs to disclose — and hand you the snippet.
1 · Does your app have an AI chatbot, assistant, companion or copilot that talks to users?
2 · Where do users interact with it?
3 · Can people in the EU use it? (Even a few, even just your website or app store listing.)
4 · Any users in the US? (California, New York, Utah and others have chatbot rules.)
One line in your <head>. It adds a clear, unobtrusive "you're talking to an AI"
badge — localized to the visitor's language. For mobile apps, use the same disclosure copy in-app while
the mobile SDK is validated. This part is free, forever.
<script src="https://ainoticekit.pages.dev/disclose.js"
data-disclose data-lang="auto"></script>
Live demo on this page → look at the bottom‑right corner. That badge is the snippet running.
The badge is the easy part. The hard part is keeping up as EU AI Act guidance, US state laws and app-store review expectations evolve — and being able to show you disclosed it if a customer, regulator or app reviewer ever asks.
$19/mo
or $190/yr
Founding price, locked for the first 100 apps.
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or $490/yr
Billing handled by Lemon Squeezy (EU VAT included). Cancel anytime.
A visible dated log is part of the trust layer. AI Notice Kit tracks disclosure changes publicly, then turns them into plain-English product actions. Compliance aid, not legal advice.
Apple clarified that apps must disclose where personal data is shared with third parties, including third-party AI, and obtain explicit permission before doing so.
Covered companion chatbot operators need clear notices in specific cases. The law includes a private civil action with damages of $1,000 per violation or actual damages, whichever is greater.
The European Commission published a voluntary code supporting AI Act Article 50 transparency obligations for labeling and marking AI-generated content.
Article 50 transparency obligations become applicable, including requirements related to AI interaction disclosure and generated-content labeling.
No. AI Notice Kit is a compliance aid that helps you add and document an AI‑disclosure. It is not legal advice and does not guarantee compliance with any specific law. For your exact obligations, talk to a lawyer.
Article 50 says that when people interact with an AI system, they must be informed they're dealing with an AI (unless it's obvious). It applies from August 2, 2026 (as currently scheduled). The disclosure must be clear and given at the first interaction.
The EU AI Act can apply if people in the EU use your app, wherever you're based. Several US states also have chatbot rules — though their scope differs, so check which fit your use case. The free check points you in the right direction.
Mobile teams need the disclosure to appear inside the app, not just on a marketing site. Apple also expects clear disclosure and explicit permission before personal data is shared with third parties, including third-party AI. Android teams face the same user-trust and jurisdiction problem even when the platform rule differs.
It's a small, restyleable line — you control wording, position and theme. The goal is "clear", not "loud".
No. The badge runs entirely in the browser and sends us nothing about your users. Privacy‑first by default.
Add the disclosure now, document it, and keep the record while the rules move.