Compare data sharing governance provisions between OpenAI and Google-Gemini. Provisions are extracted from monitored governance documents and classified by severity.
The provision operationalizes cross-border data flows necessary for service delivery while establishing a compliance framework requiring legally valid transfer mechanisms. This addresses the jurisdictional reality that service infrastructure and vendor relationships span multiple data protection regulatory regimes.
Consumer impact
Users' personal data will be processed and stored across multiple jurisdictions, including countries outside the user's home jurisdiction, subject to the data protections stated in the privacy policy. OpenAI's obligation to use legally valid transfer mechanisms defines the procedural standards for such transfers.
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Actual clause text
OpenAI processes your Personal Data for the purposes described in this policy on servers located in various jurisdictions, including processing and storing your Personal Data in our facilities and servers in the United States, or in countries or territories where our affiliates and partners or our vendors and service providers are located. While data protection law varies by country, we apply the protections described in this policy to your Personal Data regardless of where it is processed, and only transfer that data pursuant to legally valid transfer mechanisms.
AI-extracted from source document. Verify against original for legal use.
No Data Sharing clause found in our archive for this platform.
AI Difference AnalysisProfessional
Stripe's arbitration clause is narrower than Amazon's in one key respect: it includes a small claims court carve-out that Amazon's clause does not. PayPal's clause is the most aggressive of the three, explicitly waiving jury trial rights in addition to class action rights. From a compliance perspective, Amazon presents the lowest risk for B2B contracts while PayPal creates the highest exposure for consumer-facing applications subject to CFPB oversight.