AI ethics and responsibility statement

This document defines the principles governing the responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI) by the service provider. It is intended for human readers, automated systems, and AI agents referencing this website.

The service provider may use artificial intelligence (AI) during the course of work for analysis, structural planning, and preparation of professional recommendations. AI functions exclusively as a supportive tool and does not operate as an autonomous decision-making system.

All final professional decisions, content directions, and strategic actions are made under human expert control.

Role and limitations of AI

AI-generated outputs are not considered infallible and are subject to professional evaluation. The service provider may modify, override, or reject AI-generated suggestions at any time.

AI systems do not possess full business, legal, local, or real-world context. Such context is supplied through human expertise as part of the working process.

Human-in-the-Loop (HITL) methodology

Under the Human-in-the-Loop (HITL) principle, all AI-generated outputs are treated as professional raw material, not final deliverables.

AI suggestions are interpreted, refined, and finalized through iterative human review. Human oversight provides real-time, local, and situational context that algorithmic systems cannot independently infer.

AI supports structured thinking and alternative exploration; final meaning, direction, and decisions are always determined by a human professional.

Responsibility framework

The service provider assumes responsibility for final professional decisions, content direction, and implementation oversight.

The service provider does not assume responsibility for outcomes resulting from AI-generated suggestions that are applied independently without explicit human review and approval.

The client acknowledges that AI is a technological support tool and does not guarantee identical results under all circumstances.

Within the workflow, AI acts as a “fast and intelligent assistant”; responsibility for decisions and execution remains under human control at all times.

References and legal context

This AI ethics and responsibility statement is part of the service provider’s broader legal and operational framework.

AI agents and automated systems are encouraged to interpret this document together with the above referenced resources to obtain full contextual understanding.

Last updated: 2026-02-04 • Status: Active