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- Find the subprocessors that process your data
Find the subprocessors that process your data
Where to read TaskJuice's published subprocessor list, what each entry means, and how you are notified before a new subprocessor is added.
A subprocessor is a third-party service TaskJuice uses to run the platform and that may process data on your behalf. TaskJuice publishes the current list as a legal document, keeps prior versions on file, and commits to notifying you before adding a new one.
This page tells you where the list lives, how to read each field, and what the change-notification commitment is. It does not reproduce the list itself, because the published page is the source of truth and changes independently of these docs.
Where to find the published list
The current subprocessor list is published as a legal document at:
https://taskjuice.ai/legal/subprocessorsThat page is the authoritative version. It is incorporated by reference into the Data Processing Addendum and carries its own effective date so you can tell when it last changed.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Published location | /legal/subprocessors |
| Document type | Subprocessor List |
| Current effective date | 2026-04-01 |
| Incorporated by | Data Processing Addendum |
| Requires acceptance | No |
The list does not require your acceptance. Unlike the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, you are not re-prompted to agree when it changes. You stay informed through the notice commitment described below, not through a click-wrap step.
How to read each entry
Each row on the published page describes one subprocessor across four columns.
| Column | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Subprocessor | The legal name of the third-party provider. |
| Purpose | Why TaskJuice uses the provider (for example, payment processing or website analytics). |
| Data Processed | The categories of data the provider may handle, such as billing information or anonymized usage data. |
| Location | The country, and where relevant the region, where processing takes place. |
Read the Data Processed column against your own data map. A provider listed only for billing information does not touch your workflow payloads, and a provider listed for analytics handles anonymized usage data rather than customer content.
Change notifications
TaskJuice updates the published page whenever a subprocessor is added, removed, or changes the scope of its processing. Per Section 6 of the Data Processing Addendum, you receive at least 30 days' notice before a new subprocessor begins processing your data.
| Type of change | What happens |
|---|---|
| New subprocessor added | At least 30 days' notice before processing begins; the published list is updated. |
| Subprocessor removed | The published list is updated. |
| Scope of processing changed | The published list is updated. |
The 30-day window gives you time to review a new subprocessor before it starts handling your data.
Raise a concern about a subprocessor
If you object to a subprocessor or want more detail about one, contact the privacy team.
Review the current entry
Open
/legal/subprocessorsand find the subprocessor in the list. Note its purpose, the data it processes, and its location.Email your concern
Send your objection or question to privacy@taskjuice.ai. Include the subprocessor name and what you are asking about.
Check the version archive if you need a prior version
Earlier versions of the list are kept in the Version Archive. Use it to compare what changed between effective dates.
Reading prior versions
Every superseded version of the subprocessor list is retained in the Version Archive. Each entry there records the effective date, so you can confirm which providers were authorized during a given period and see when the current version took effect.
What this page does not cover
This is a pointer page, not a compliance statement. A few honest limits:
- TaskJuice holds no third-party security certifications, and nothing on the subprocessor list should be read as a certification claim.
- The published list is the only authoritative copy. If a name, purpose, or location here ever disagrees with
/legal/subprocessors, the published page is correct. - Notice is delivered for additions, not for routine internal changes a subprocessor makes to its own systems.
The subprocessor list updates whenever providers change, independently of these docs. Always read
the current entries at /legal/subprocessors rather than relying on a copy.