The shift from traditional search engines to generative AI systems represents the most significant change in information discovery since the commercialization of the internet. This charter examines how small and medium businesses face systematic disadvantages in AI-mediated markets due to opaque algorithms, hallucination risks, and linguistic and cultural biases. Drawing on empirical data from eight major generative AI platforms (ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Microsoft Copilot, Perplexity, Claude, DeepSeek, Qwen, Kimi, and Mistral), consumer behavior research, and academic work on Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) from Princeton and Georgia Tech, the paper documents the current state of AI-mediated commerce as of April 2026. Key findings include: 80% of shoppers under 44 now use Large Language Models as their primary shopping vector; 41% of consumers have purchased products based on AI recommendations in the past six months; and ChatGPT market share has dropped from 86.7% to 64 to 68% in twelve months, signaling ecosystem fragmentation. The charter proposes four fundamental rights for SMBs in the generative AI ecosystem: 1. The Right to Visibility, through transparent, non-discriminatory discovery protocols2. The Right to Correction, for disputing AI-generated misinformation3. The Right to Representation, for non-English and culturally diverse markets4. The Right to Audit, for monitoring brand representation across platforms The paper concludes with policy recommendations on three time horizons (0-12 months, 1-3 years, 3-5 years) directed at think tanks, regulatory bodies, and international coordination mechanisms. It argues that visibility in generative AI should be treated as a baseline right rather than a privilege earned through technical sophistication accessible only to well-resourced enterprises.
Othmane El Ouarzazi (Fri,) studied this question.