ChatGPT, Copilot, Gemini… your employees already use them. Every day. To summarise documents, draft emails, analyse data. And in most cases, nobody knows exactly what information is leaving the company.
This isn't a productivity problem. It's a control problem.
The answer isn't to ban AI — it's to deploy it properly.
When an employee pastes a client contract into ChatGPT to get a summary, that text is processed on OpenAI's servers. When they use Copilot to draft a proposal, that content passes through Microsoft's cloud infrastructure. Most employees don't think about this. They're just getting their work done.
The risk isn't hypothetical. It's happening now, at scale, across every industry — and it's exactly the kind of exposure the Spanish Data Protection Agency (AEPD) warns about when personal or client data is pasted into third-party AI tools without a data processing agreement in place.
At AP Interactive we deploy private language models inside our clients' infrastructure. No data leaving to third parties. No external APIs processing your confidential information.
What this means in practice:
We don't deploy these models on third-party cloud. We do it on our own infrastructure (AS215691), with hardware we control and data centres in Madrid, Netherlands, Germany and New York.
Your data doesn't leave. Full stop.
AI isn't the future — it's the present. But deploying it without control is worse than not deploying it at all.
If you'd like to talk about what a private AI deployment would look like for your organisation, get in touch.
When an employee pastes a client contract into ChatGPT, that text is processed on OpenAI's servers. When they use Copilot, the content passes through Microsoft's cloud infrastructure. Most employees don't think about this — they're just getting their work done — but it means confidential information is leaving the company's control.
No. The alternative is private deployment: an LLM trained on your internal documents, running on infrastructure you control, with no data leaving to third parties and no external APIs processing confidential information. AP Interactive deploys these models on its own infrastructure (AS215691) rather than third-party cloud.
No — banning AI doesn't solve the underlying problem and just pushes usage underground. The answer is deploying it properly: on infrastructure you control, with real regulatory compliance built in rather than treated as a checkbox on a form.