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Getting consent

We recommend always asking for consent before transcribing others, and offer a feature for automated consent messaging.

Depending on where your meeting participants are located, you may need to get consent from participants in meetings prior to using Granola to transcribe. 

You can find more information on recording laws state by state here. Please note, this is a third-party resource and Granola is not responsible for the accuracy of third-party websites.

Ultimately, you are responsible for obtaining consent from participants where required by law. Regardless of whether you are legally required to do so, we strongly recommend that you always ask for consent before transcribing.

For virtual meetings, we’ve built a feature on macOS for Automatic Consent Messaging that sends an automated message at the start of each meeting to let others know you’re using Granola.

Please note this is not yet available for Windows, and is not required on iOS which is for in-person only meetings.

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Granola on iPhone doesn't have automatic consent messaging. If consent is required to record your call, you should obtain it prior to initiating recording. There's a pause button to pause recording if you need it.

Other questions

Are we storing audio?
Granola for macOS and Windows doesn’t store audio, only the transcript. Granola for iPhone temporarily caches audio during the meeting - when transcription is completed, cached audio is deleted from all Granola and third-party systems.

Is the transcript accessible to others automatically?
No, your notes remain private unless you create or enable sharing links. Learn more about transcription in Live Transcription.