A CFO mentions during a board meeting that the company is “exploring strategic alternatives” for its underperforming division. Two weeks later, that phrase appears in a Wall Street Journal article citing “people familiar with the matter.” The board launches an investigation. Every attendee’s notes, devices, and communication records are subpoenaed.
This scenario keeps general counsel awake at night. Board meetings generate the most sensitive conversations in any organization — M&A discussions, executive compensation, litigation strategy, regulatory responses. Yet most boards still rely on a secretary taking handwritten minutes that capture decisions but miss the nuance of how those decisions were reached.
The Confidentiality Paradox
Board meetings need better documentation and tighter security simultaneously. That’s the paradox.
Better documentation because boards make decisions worth billions. When a shareholder lawsuit alleges the board failed its fiduciary duty, the quality of meeting records determines the outcome. “The board discussed the acquisition” is legally useless. Who raised concerns? What risks were identified? What alternatives were considered?
Tighter security because every word spoken in a boardroom is potentially material nonpublic information. A leaked discussion about earnings guidance, a pending acquisition, or executive misconduct can trigger SEC investigations, destroy market value, and end careers.
Most organizations solve this by choosing one side: either they document thoroughly (and accept the security risk of detailed records existing) or they keep records minimal (and accept the legal risk of inadequate documentation).
Why Standard Meeting Tools Are Disqualified
- Cloud-based transcription services store audio on third-party servers — creating discoverable records outside the company’s control. In litigation, opposing counsel can subpoena the transcription provider directly.
- Video conferencing transcription features (Zoom AI, Teams Copilot) process audio through the platform provider’s infrastructure. The data handling terms rarely meet the confidentiality requirements that board-level discussions demand.
- Consumer AI assistants that “listen and summarize” meetings send audio to cloud APIs with broad data usage rights. Some explicitly reserve the right to use conversation data for model training.
For a board discussing a potential $2 billion acquisition, none of these options are acceptable.
What a Board-Ready Solution Requires
Transcription Accuracy on Executive Vocabulary
Board discussions involve EBITDA multiples, poison pill provisions, say-on-pay votes, material weakness disclosures, and Regulation FD compliance. AmyNote uses OpenAI’s latest Speech API, which transcribes terms like “golden parachute,” “Section 16 filing,” and “Revlon duties” accurately.
Speaker Identification for Attribution
When the audit committee chair raises a concern about revenue recognition, that attribution matters for the board’s defense in any future litigation. AmyNote’s speaker identification learns board members’ voices across sessions — after the first meeting, each director is automatically identified in subsequent sessions.
AI Analysis With Zero-Training Guarantees
AmyNote’s AI analysis runs through Anthropic’s Claude Opus. Both OpenAI and Anthropic contractually guarantee that user data is never used for model training. Audio is encrypted in transit, processed, and not retained on provider servers.
Local Storage Only
All transcripts and recordings stay on the device — not on a cloud server, not in a SaaS dashboard, not anywhere that opposing counsel can subpoena from a third party.
The Practical Impact
The shift from manual minutes to AI-assisted board documentation changes the governance equation:
- Meeting minutes quality: Secretary’s interpretation becomes a verbatim record with speaker attribution
- Preparation time: Board secretary spends 2-3 hours post-meeting → 15-minute review of AI summary
- Fiduciary duty defense: “The board discussed risks” becomes a searchable record of exactly which risks, raised by whom
- Cross-meeting continuity: Rely on memory of prior discussions → search across all board sessions
- Audit committee support: Manual review of prior discussions → instant retrieval of relevant past statements
The time savings matter, but the governance improvement matters more. A board with searchable, attributed records of its deliberations is in a fundamentally stronger position.
Getting Started
AmyNote handles transcription through OpenAI’s Speech API and AI analysis through Anthropic’s Claude Opus — both with contractual zero-training guarantees. All recordings stay on your device, under your control.
Try it free for 3 days at amynote.app
Originally published as an X Article.



