By now, artificial intelligence has worked its way into nearly every corner of the business world. Companies are using AI tools to create content, generate proposals, automate customer service, analyze data, and streamline workflows. The efficiency gains are real — but so are the risks. And most businesses haven’t stopped to ask a critical question: What happens when AI gets it wrong?
The Risks Are Already Here
AI tools like ChatGPT and similar platforms are powerful, but they are not infallible — and the mistakes they make can carry real consequences. Consider a few scenarios that are not so much hypothetical:
- Copyright and Trademark Infringement. AI-generated content can inadvertently reproduce protected material. If your business publishes that content — in an ad, a proposal, or on your website — you could be on the hook for infringement claims, even if you had no idea that the info was pulled from a protected source.
- AI tools can generate false information that reads as fact. If that content damages the reputation of an individual or another business, you could face a defamation lawsuit.
- Financial Harm. AI-generated analysis, recommendations, or reports that a client relies on — and that turn out to be incorrect — can create significant liability exposure for your business.
- Unauthorized Data Disclosure. AI systems that process customer or employee information can inadvertently expose sensitive or confidential data, triggering privacy-related claims.
- Bodily Injury or Property Damage. In industries where AI information can influence physical decisions — construction, healthcare, engineering, logistics — acting on flawed AI recommendations could have real-world consequences that go far beyond a financial dispute.
Who’s at Risk?
Here’s the important distinction if you’re thinking this doesn’t apply to you: this isn’t just a technology company problem.
AI liability risk touches businesses across virtually every industry. If you use AI tools in your operations — even off-the-shelf software like automated chatbots, content generators, or workflow platforms — your business may have an exposure that your current insurance program doesn’t address.
Most general liability policies were not written with AI-generated content or AI-assisted decision-making in mind. Professional liability and E&O policies may cover some scenarios, but they often have gaps when it comes to the specific ways AI can create harm. The result is that many businesses are operating with a meaningful coverage gap they don’t know exists.
What’s the Solution?
The insurance market has responded to this emerging risk with a product specifically designed for it: Generative AI Liability Coverage.
This coverage is built for companies using AI in their day-to-day operations — not just for the tech firms building the AI tools themselves. It’s designed to address the unique exposures that come with integrating generative AI into business processes, including many of the scenarios described above.
This is a new product in a fast-moving space, and coverage terms, availability, and eligibility vary. But the window to get ahead of this risk — before a claim makes it urgent — is NOW.
Don’t Wait for a Claim to Start the Conversation
The liability landscape around AI is evolving quickly. Courts are still working through many of the legal questions, regulators are paying close attention, and plaintiffs’ attorneys are already identifying AI-related claims as a growing area of opportunity.
The businesses that will fare best are the ones that take a proactive look at how they’re using AI today and make sure their insurance program keeps pace with those activities.
If your company uses AI tools in any capacity, we encourage you to reach out and have a conversation about what your current coverage does — and doesn’t — include. We’re here to help you understand your exposure and make sure you’re protected.