Cubica

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AI Transparency Notice

How Cubica (operated by Ibitsu LLC) discloses AI-assisted creation, copyright scope, and consumer-facing AI notice practices.

Last updated: July 13, 2026

1. About this page

This AI Transparency Notice, in its totality, was produced with artificial intelligence using Cursor as an authoring and engineering tool, under direction of Ibitsu LLC for the Cubica product.

The notice is published so visitors, counterparties, and future copyright applicants can understand where AI was used, what remains a human-directed claim, and how we handle consumer AI disclosures.

2. Corporate claimant and authorship

Cubica is operated by Ibitsu LLC. For public site disclosures and corporate ownership of the platform brand and human-directed contributions, the claimant is Ibitsu LLC.

U.S. Copyright Office practice requires human authorship for copyrightable expression. Public website notices do not require listing a natural person's name. If Ibitsu LLC files a U.S. copyright registration for mixed human/AI works, that application (not this public page) will identify the human author(s) and will exclude or disclaim AI-generated portions as required by Office guidance.

3. U.S. Copyright Office disclosure practice

Consistent with the U.S. Copyright Office statement of policy on works containing AI-generated material (effective March 16, 2023; 88 Fed. Reg. 16,190) and related congressional analysis (CRS Legal Sidebar LSB10922), applicants must disclose more than de minimis AI-generated content when seeking registration.

In a registration application, the human author's contributions are claimed in fields such as "Author Created," and AI-generated material is excluded in the Limitation of Claim (or equivalent) so the scope of the copyright claim is clear. AI systems and tool vendors are not listed as authors merely because they were used.

For Cubica marketing pages, legal notices (including this page), interface copy, and portions of documentation or code generated or heavily drafted with AI tools: such AI-generated expression is not claimed as copyrightable authorship standing alone. Ibitsu LLC claims only the human-directed selection, arrangement, editing, product design decisions, business rules, and other human contributions that meet the Office's human-authorship standard.

  • Disclose appreciable AI-generated material when applying for registration
  • Describe human-authored elements in the claim
  • Exclude or disclaim AI-generated portions in the Limitation of Claim
  • Do not name an AI system as an author or co-author solely for tool use

4. State AI disclosure to consumers

Some U.S. jurisdictions (including Colorado's consumer AI transparency framework) require disclosing when a consumer is interacting with an AI system, unless that fact would be obvious to a reasonable person. Colorado and similar laws also emphasize notice when automated decision-making technologies materially influence consequential decisions.

Cubica primarily provides a human-operated business software platform (estimates, projects, payments, contractor workflows). We do not currently deploy a consumer-facing generative chatbot that impersonates a human agent.

If we later offer consumer-facing AI assistants or automated decision tools that are not obvious as AI, or that materially influence consequential decisions, we will provide clear pre-use notices and update this Notice and our Privacy Policy accordingly.

5. How we use AI today

Ibitsu LLC uses AI-assisted tooling (including Cursor and related large language models) in building and maintaining Cubica. Examples include drafting software code, refining interface and marketing copy, preparing legal/policy text such as this Notice, and accelerating documentation.

Human operators remaining accountable include engineers and decision-makers for Ibitsu LLC, who review, accept or reject outputs, and define product requirements, architecture, pricing engine rules, and security controls. AI does not independently approve legal contracts, construction pricing authority, or payment settlement.

  • AI-assisted software development and refactoring
  • Drafting and revising public legal, marketing, and help content
  • Not: autonomous customer contract acceptance or bank settlement without human-configured rules and provider integrations

6. Platforms, tools, and contractors

Third-party AI tool terms (including Cursor and model providers) may require attribution, restrict training uses, or set commercial-use rules. Ibitsu LLC intends to use such tools within those terms and retain rights in human-directed work product to the extent permitted by law and contract.

Organizations and independent contractors who contribute content, code, designs, or copy to Cubica or to tenant projects should disclose material AI usage to Ibitsu LLC or the hiring Organization (as applicable), so rights can be traced, infringement risk reduced, and registration disclosures remain accurate.

Organizations using the Service should adopt the same practice with their own staff and subcontractors for customer-facing deliverables.

7. Credibility and editorial practices

To maintain trust and align with helpful-content expectations (including search guidelines that reward original, people-first material), we recommend documenting creative process artifacts such as prompts, review notes, and human edits for material public content—and we intend to keep internal records of that kind for significant disclosures and marketing claims.

This Notice functions as our public editorial statement on AI-assisted content creation for the Cubica website and product surfaces operated by Ibitsu LLC.

8. Scope of copyright claims (public disclaimer)

To the extent this website and related Cubica materials mix human and AI authorship: Ibitsu LLC does not assert copyright in purely AI-generated expression. Any public copyright notice for Cubica covers only human authorship and human-directed selection, coordination, and arrangement that qualifies under U.S. law.

This page is an informational disclosure, not legal advice. Requirements vary by jurisdiction and evolve; consult counsel for registration strategy or enforcement questions.

9. References

Selected public sources informing this Notice:

  • U.S. Copyright Office, Copyright Registration Guidance: Works Containing Material Generated by Artificial Intelligence (Mar. 16, 2023), https://www.copyright.gov/ai/ai_policy_guidance.pdf
  • Congressional Research Service, Generative Artificial Intelligence and Copyright Law (LSB10922), https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/LSB10922
  • Colorado consumer AI transparency / interaction-disclosure concepts (including obvious-interaction exceptions and automated decision notice themes under Colorado AI legislation and successor frameworks)

10. Contact

Questions about this Notice or copyright/AI disclosures: legal@cubica.dev.

Privacy questions: privacy@cubica.dev.