AI tools pillar

Publish a branded portal showcasing your AI governance practices

Build trust with customers and regulators through a configurable public trust center with 7 sections, 8 compliance badges, and downloadable resources.

AI Trust Center screenshot

The challenge

Customers and regulators demand transparency

Organizations face increasing pressure to demonstrate AI governance practices publicly. Without a trust center, you're answering the same questions repeatedly via sales calls, RFPs, and security questionnaires.

Customers ask about AI practices in every sales cycle, requiring manual responses each time

Security questionnaires demand compliance documentation that's scattered across systems

No public evidence of ISO certifications, SOC2 reports, or regulatory compliance

GDPR requires disclosure of subprocessors, but information is buried in legal documents

Competitors with public trust centers appear more transparent and trustworthy

EU AI Act transparency requirements need a public interface to meet obligations

7Content sections
8Compliance badges
CustomBranding (logo, colors)
PublicPortal access

Benefits

Why use AI Trust Center?

Key advantages for your AI governance program

Display 8 compliance badges: SOC2 Type I/II, ISO 27001, ISO 42001, CCPA, GDPR, HIPAA, EU AI Act

Configure 7 content sections with individual visibility controls for each

Share downloadable resources like policies, certifications, and documentation

Maintain subprocessor registry with name, purpose, location, and links

Capabilities

What you can do

Core functionality of AI Trust Center

7 configurable sections

Control visibility of Intro, Company Description, Compliance Badges, Resources, Subprocessors, and Terms & Contact independently.

8 compliance badges

Display SOC2 Type I, SOC2 Type II, ISO 27001, ISO 42001, CCPA, GDPR, HIPAA, and EU AI Act certifications with toggle controls.

Resource library

Upload and share downloadable files (policies, certifications, documentation) with name, description, and visibility control.

Subprocessor registry

Maintain a public list of third-party data processors with name, purpose, location, and website URL.

Enterprise SaaS example

Accelerating enterprise sales with public transparency

See how organizations use this capability in practice

The challenge

An enterprise SaaS company using AI for customer analytics spends 40% of sales cycles answering security and compliance questions. Each prospect requires custom documentation about AI practices, certifications, and data processors.

The solution

The company launches an AI Trust Center displaying their ISO 42001 and SOC2 Type II badges, a resource library with downloadable compliance documentation, and a subprocessor registry listing all third-party AI providers. The Intro section explains their AI governance philosophy.

The outcome

Sales cycles shorten by 3 weeks on average. Prospects review the Trust Center before calls, arriving with informed questions rather than basic compliance queries. Security questionnaire responses now link to Trust Center resources, reducing response time by 60%.

Why VerifyWise

Transparency that sells itself

What makes our approach different

Self-service for customers

Instead of answering the same compliance questions on every sales call, direct prospects to your Trust Center. Downloadable resources, certification badges, and governance documentation are available 24/7.

Section-level control

Each of the 7 sections has independent visibility toggles. Show certifications but hide subprocessors. Display your mission but keep terms internal. You control exactly what the public sees.

Regulatory-ready

EU AI Act transparency requirements, GDPR subprocessor disclosures, and SOC2 trust principles all need public documentation. The Trust Center provides the structure to meet these obligations.

Regulatory context

Transparency requirements across frameworks

Multiple regulations require organizations to publicly disclose information about AI systems and data processing.

EU AI Act Article 13

High-risk AI systems shall be designed and developed to ensure their operation is sufficiently transparent to enable deployers to interpret the system's output and use it appropriately.

GDPR Article 13/14

Data controllers must provide information about processing purposes, legal basis, recipients, and transfer safeguards. The Trust Center subprocessor registry supports this disclosure requirement.

SOC2 Trust Principles

The Common Criteria requires that entities communicate system descriptions and commitments to users. A Trust Center provides the public interface for these communications.

Technical details

How it works

Implementation details and technical capabilities

7 configurable sections: Info, Intro, Company Description, Compliance Badges, Resources, Subprocessors, Terms & Contact

8 compliance badge toggles: SOC2 Type I/II, ISO 27001, ISO 42001, CCPA, GDPR, HIPAA, EU AI Act

Custom branding: Organization logo (linked to file storage), title, and header color

Section-level visibility controls: Toggle intro_visible, compliance_badges_visible, etc. independently

Intro section: Purpose, Our Statement, and Our Mission with individual visibility toggles

Company Description: Background, Core Benefits, and Compliance Documentation fields

Resource management: Uploadable files with name, description, file_id reference, and visibility

Subprocessor registry: Name, purpose, location, and URL for third-party processor transparency

Terms & Contact: Configurable terms text, privacy text, and contact email

Search integration via Wise Search for resources and subprocessors

Supported frameworks

EU AI Act TransparencyGDPR Article 13/14SOC2 Trust Principles

Integrations

File StorageWise SearchEvidence Hub

FAQ

Common questions

Frequently asked questions about AI Trust Center

Ready to get started?

See how VerifyWise can help you govern AI with confidence.

AI Trust Center | AI Governance Platform | VerifyWise