Generic AI doesn't know your rules
An off-the-shelf AI writer has no idea your industry can't say a product “treats” anything, or that a peptide is research-use-only. It writes the persuasive line and leaves the liability with you. This engine works the other way around: the compliance rules for your industry are part of generation, not an afterthought, and a second layer scans every page before it can publish.
How the guardrails actually work
Industry-aware rules
It detects a regulated business and loads the right rule set — research-chemical/peptide is the strictest: research-use-only, no human-consumption, disease, dosing, or performance claims.
Required disclaimers
The disclaimer your industry requires is written onto the page — and force-attached even if the model leaves it off.
A second safety net
After generation, the copy is scanned for prohibited phrasing (cure, treat, dosing, for human use, weight loss…). A hit flags the page.
A human-review gate
Flagged pages are held and cannot publish without an explicit approval — nothing risky goes live on its own.
Stricter where it sells
A regulated storefront gets every rule at its strictest; a marketing site gets latitude but still can't make a prohibited claim.
Built in, not bolted on
Compliance is part of the generator, so it applies to every page automatically — not a checklist someone has to remember.
What it enforces — and what it can't
Straight answer: it enforces the content rules — no prohibited claims, required disclaimers, a review gate — and it's strictest on a regulated storefront. It is not legal advice and does not replace your compliance counsel or your own responsibility for what you publish. It dramatically lowers the odds of an accidental violation; it does not transfer the liability.
Compliance-enforced AI vs. a generic writer
| Knows your industry's rules | Yes, loaded automatically | No idea |
| Required disclaimers | Written + force-attached | You remember, or don't |
| Prohibited-claim scan | Every page, before publish | None |
| Risky output | Held for review | Published as written |
| Selling vs. marketing | Different rules per site | One generic mode |
Questions about ownership
How does it know what my industry can't say?
It detects a regulated business from your profile and loads the matching rule set — peptide/research-chemical, supplement, medical, legal, or financial — each with its own prohibited claims and required disclaimer.
Can it still publish something non-compliant?
Generation follows the rules, and a second scan flags prohibited phrasing. Flagged pages are held for review and can't publish without an explicit approval — so a slip is caught, not shipped.
Is this a substitute for legal compliance review?
No. It's a strong guardrail that prevents accidental violations, not legal advice. Your counsel and your own judgment still own the final call.
Does the selling site follow the same rules as the marketing site?
The rules are the same; the strictness isn't. A regulated storefront is held to every rule at its tightest; a marketing site has more room but still can't make a prohibited claim.
Content that won't get you fined.
Generated within your industry's rules, with a review gate before anything goes live.
See how the Business Builder works →