The Problem With Most AI Tools
ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Copilot — great tools. And they all have one thing in common: your queries, your documents, your customer data end up on servers owned by US companies. For private individuals: no problem. For businesses with sensitive customer data: a GDPR problem.
Imagine: you ask an AI about a member who has announced they're cancelling. Or you have an AI summarise member reports. The data transmitted in the process is personal data within the meaning of the GDPR — and may not simply be processed on US servers.
"The GDPR protects your customers' data. Anyone using AI tools from the US without a data processing agreement and EU server guarantee risks fines of up to 4% of annual turnover."
On-Premise AI: What It Actually Means
On-premise does not mean you need a server room in your basement. It means the AI model runs on a server under your control — either on your own premises or with a European hosting provider.
The Model Runs Locally
Instead of sending your query to OpenAI, the language model runs on your server. Ollama is an open-source framework that makes exactly this possible — with powerful models such as Llama, Mistral or Phi.
Your Data Never Leaves the System
What is entered into your system stays in your system. No logs on foreign servers. No training with your data. No API call to the US.
Automation With n8n
BudiSync uses n8n as a workflow automation platform — also on European servers. Workflows connect your data to the local AI without ever involving an external service.
Why This Matters Especially for Studios and Practices
Studios and wellness practices manage membership contracts, payment data, attendance histories and sometimes health information. This data is particularly worthy of protection under the GDPR.
- Membership contracts contain name, address, bank details
- Attendance data reveals movement profiles
- Employee data is subject to special protection
- Communication histories can be sensitive
Every one of these data points may only be processed under controlled conditions. Anyone using AI tools without a data processing agreement has no control over what happens to this data.
For Medical Practices: Even Stricter Requirements
The same applies to medical facilities — only more so. Patient data, diagnoses and treatment histories are health data under Art. 9 GDPR. Their processing is subject to the strictest requirements.
Sangness Medical IT, one of our clients, manages medical facilities throughout Austria. The requirement was clear: no customer data outside the EU legal framework. The solution: a fully on-premise platform on Austrian servers.
The Fair Comparison: Cloud vs. On-Premise
What Cloud AI Does Better
Faster to get started, lower setup costs, more frequent model updates. For non-critical applications — e.g. writing marketing copy — cloud AI is often the more practical choice.
When On-Premise Is the Right Choice
When you work with customer data, employee data or health information. When you need GDPR audit trails. When your data protection officer does not approve cloud services from outside the EU.
"More setup effort, full control. For regulated industries, this is not a question of convenience — it is a question of compliance."
Austria, Germany, Croatia: What the Authorities Say
The Austrian Data Protection Authority (DSB) has made it clear on multiple occasions: the transfer of personal data to third countries without an adequate level of protection is impermissible — even if it is "only" for an AI query.
In Germany, the Federal Commissioner for Data Protection holds the same view: without standard contractual clauses and without a guarantee of data sovereignty, the use of US AI tools in a productive context is legally risky.
In Croatia (GDPR softver Hrvatska), the same EU rules apply — and supervisory authorities are becoming more active. Those who are properly set up today will have no problem tomorrow.