Introducing the Free DPDP Compliance Scanner: 18 Checks, Shadow AI Detection, and Board-Ready Reports
Scan any website against DPDP 2023, RBI FREE-AI Sutras, and SEBI 2026 mandates in 2 minutes. No sign-up required.
Harsh · 2 May 2026 · 8 min read
Why we built a free compliance scanner
We built the CrewCheck DPDP Compliance Scanner to answer compliance questions in 2 minutes, for free, with no sign-up required. Enter your website URL, and our scanner crawls your site, analyzes consent mechanisms, detects shadow AI endpoints, and grades you against 18 compliance checks.
Shadow AI detection: the feature nobody else has
When we crawl your website with a headless browser, we monitor every network request. If any request goes to a known LLM API endpoint, we flag it. Undocumented AI usage is a critical compliance gap under RBI and SEBI guidelines.
Board-ready PDF reports
When the scan completes, we generate a comprehensive PDF report formatted to SEBI standards. The report includes overall compliance score, RBI Sutra Scorecard, Breach Readiness Score, critical findings with remediation steps, and a DPIA summary.
How to operationalize this in an Indian AI workflow
Treat this topic as a production workflow, not a policy note. Identify the user action that starts the AI call, the personal or regulated data that can enter the prompt, the model provider that receives it, and the owner responsible for changing the route when something goes wrong. For an Indian product, the data inventory should explicitly cover Aadhaar-like identifiers, PAN, UPI IDs, account numbers, ABHA IDs, mobile numbers, addresses, and mixed-language free text because those are the values that often slip through generic Western scanners.
Once the workflow is named, put the control at the boundary. For CrewCheck, that means routing the model call through the gateway so detection, redaction, rule evaluation, provider choice, and audit logging happen consistently. The important detail is that the control should run on every request, including retries, fallback providers, demos, internal admin tools, and queue workers that call models outside the main web path.
| Control point | Evidence to retain | Operational owner |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-prompt scan | PII type, rule ID, request hash, redacted payload | Platform engineering |
| Provider routing | Selected provider, region notes, fallback reason | AI platform owner |
| Post-output scan | Blocked text class, replacement copy, reviewer status | Product owner |
What evidence a buyer should ask for
A serious buyer should ask for evidence that connects the claim to live behavior. For a privacy claim, that means redaction logs, blocked examples, sanitized payloads, and data-retention behavior. For a safety claim, that means red-team cases, circuit-breaker decisions, and output scanning results. For a compliance claim, that means the notice, purpose, rule, and provider route can be reconstructed from the audit trail without waiting for an engineer to open production logs.
The practical standard is whether the team can answer a specific question without manual archaeology: what happened to this request, which rule fired, what data was removed, which provider saw the final payload, who approved the exception, and how long will the record be retained? If that answer requires five tools and a memory of how the system was meant to work, the evidence layer is not ready yet.
- Keep one sample allowed request, one redacted request, and one blocked request for each high-risk AI route.
- Link every public compliance claim to a live page, report export, gateway event, or scanner finding.
- Review DPDP notice language whenever the AI feature changes its purpose, provider, or data fields.
- Retest Hindi, Hinglish, spaced, hyphenated, and word-digit personal-data variants before release.
A safe next step
Start with one high-risk path and make it boringly inspectable. Run realistic Indian examples through it, including Aadhaar-like numbers, PAN formats, UPI IDs, mixed-language prompts, and attempts to override system instructions. Check the user-facing response, the gateway event, the dashboard state, and the exportable report. The path is ready only when all four tell the same story.
That narrow verification habit matters more than a large compliance checklist. AI governance fails when teams assume controls are present because the architecture says they are. It becomes trustworthy when the live product can show the exact request, exact decision, exact redaction, exact provider route, and exact evidence behind the claim.
After that, make the check repeatable. Keep the examples in a small regression pack, rerun them before deployment, and compare the result with the public claim you are about to make. If the route, report, or dashboard no longer proves the claim, change the product or change the claim before a customer finds the gap.
The habit is deliberately plain: one workflow, one owner, one evidence trail, one live verification path. That is enough to turn a short article, launch note, or procurement answer into something an operator can actually use when a bank, insurer, hospital, or enterprise SaaS buyer asks for proof.
Internal reference path
Use this article with the DPDP consent management implementation, the Indian PII types reference, and the LLM gateway for DPDP compliance. Those three pages give the legal, data-type, and runtime-control context needed to turn the article into an implementation review.
If the workflow touches banking, lending, insurance, healthcare, education, employment, or public-sector records, add one more internal review step before shipping. Ask whether the prompt uses the minimum data needed, whether the user-facing notice matches the route, whether output scanning runs before the response is shown, and whether an exportable event exists for the buyer, auditor, regulator, or incident commander who will eventually ask for proof during a real review.
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Author
Harsh
Building CrewCheck in public from India.
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