Veeam announced three PrivacyOps AI agents for its DataAI Command Platform, aimed at automating consent management, privacy requests, compliance assessments and AI governance workflows across enterprise data environments.
Veeam announced three new PrivacyOps AI agents for its DataAI Command Platform, positioning the release as a way to help enterprises manage privacy operations and AI governance across increasingly complex data ecosystems.
According to Veeam’s press release and a parallel Business Wire announcement, the company introduced the new agentic AI capabilities at VeeamON London. Veeam said the additions are intended to automate operational privacy tasks including consent handling, privacy request intake, compliance assessments and AI governance processes.
The three agents named by Veeam are the Consent Agent, the Assessment Autocomplete Agent and the Data Subject Request Web Form Builder Agent. In a Veeam blog post, the company described these tools as PrivacyOps agents designed to help organizations scale privacy work as data volumes grow and AI systems become more deeply embedded in business processes.
Veeam said the Consent Agent is intended to support consent-related workflows across enterprise data environments. The Assessment Autocomplete Agent is described by the company as a tool for helping complete compliance and governance assessments. The Data Subject Request Web Form Builder Agent is designed to assist with creating web forms used to collect and route data subject requests.
The announcement comes as enterprises face rising pressure to manage personal data, document AI use and respond to regulatory obligations. Veeam’s materials frame the new agents as part of a broader effort to connect privacy operations with AI governance, rather than treating them as separate compliance functions.
In the Business Wire release, Veeam said the new capabilities support operational privacy, consent, compliance and AI governance on the DataAI Command Platform. The company’s own blog similarly argues that privacy operations need to scale across modern data ecosystems, especially as organizations adopt agentic AI systems that can act across applications and data stores.
The company did not present the agents as replacing legal, privacy or compliance teams. Instead, Veeam’s descriptions focus on automating and accelerating repeatable operational work, such as generating forms, assisting with assessments and coordinating privacy-related workflows. Those claims are limited to the functions described in Veeam’s announcement and blog post.
Veeam’s DataAI Command Platform is the product environment named in the announcement for these new PrivacyOps capabilities. The company’s announcement links the platform to enterprise data management, privacy controls and governance workflows.
The release also reflects a broader vendor trend: software providers are adding task-specific AI assistants to enterprise governance and compliance products. In Veeam’s case, the emphasis is on privacy operations, consent and assessment workflows rather than general-purpose productivity features.
Because the available sources are Veeam’s press release, Veeam’s blog and a Business Wire distribution of the same announcement, the claims should be read as company statements about product capabilities and intended use cases. The sources do not provide independent customer benchmarks, regulatory validation or third-party performance testing for the new agents.
For enterprise buyers, the key questions will be how the agents integrate with existing privacy tools, what level of human review is available, how audit trails are maintained and how organizations can validate outputs before they are used in compliance processes. Veeam’s announcement highlights automation and governance benefits, but implementation details, controls and customer outcomes will matter in regulated environments.
The launch adds another example of AI being embedded into governance and compliance software. Veeam’s stated goal is to help organizations scale privacy operations as AI adoption expands, with the new PrivacyOps agents acting as workflow automation components within the DataAI Command Platform.
New agents for privacy operations According to Veeam’s press release and a parallel Business Wire announcement, the company introduced the new agentic AI capabilities at VeeamON London.
Veeam said the additions are intended to automate operational privacy tasks including consent handling, privacy request intake, compliance assessments and AI governance processes.
The three agents named by Veeam are the Consent Agent, the Assessment Autocomplete Agent and the Data Subject Request Web Form Builder Agent.
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