AI tools are incredibly useful. They are also incredibly curious about your data. Every time you type something into ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI tool, that data goes somewhere. Here is how to use them without accidentally sharing your life story.
The Golden Rule: Do Not Share What You Would Not Post Publicly
This is the single most important thing to remember. AI chatbots are not private journals. Treat every conversation as if it could theoretically be seen by someone else.
What You Should NEVER Put Into an AI Tool
- Passwords or login credentials – never, under any circumstances
- Social Security numbers, tax IDs, or government IDs
- Credit card or bank account numbers
- Private medical information (unless using a HIPAA-compliant tool)
- Confidential work documents – check your employer AI policy first
- Other people personal information without their consent
Understanding Data Training
Many AI companies use your conversations to improve their models. This means your input might be reviewed by employees or used in future training data. In other words, that heartfelt 2 AM message about your relationship problems might end up teaching the next AI model how to discuss heartbreak. Here is how the major tools handle this:
- ChatGPT: Uses your data for training by default – you can opt out in Settings, Data Controls
- Claude: Does not use your conversations for training by default
- Google Gemini: Check your Google account privacy settings carefully
Action step: Go into your AI tool settings right now and check the data/privacy options. Turn off training data sharing if you are uncomfortable with it.
5 Practical Safety Tips
- Use anonymous details. Instead of "My employee John Smith at 123 Main St," say "My employee at the downtown office." You get the same AI output without exposing real information.
- Create a separate email. Sign up for AI tools with a dedicated email address, not your primary one.
- Review before sharing. Before pasting a document into AI, scan it for personal data, client names, or confidential figures. Remove or anonymize them first.
- Use incognito/temporary chats. ChatGPT offers a Temporary Chat mode that is not saved or used for training. Use it for anything sensitive.
- Check your chat history. Periodically review and delete old AI conversations that contain information you would not want stored long-term.
AI at Work: Extra Caution Required
If you are using AI for work, there are additional considerations:
- Check your company AI policy before using any AI tool with work data
- Use enterprise versions (like ChatGPT Enterprise or Claude for Business) which have stronger data protections
- Never upload proprietary code, client data, or financial reports to free-tier AI tools
- When in doubt, ask your IT department
The Bottom Line
AI tools are safe to use for the vast majority of everyday tasks. You just need to treat them like any other online service: be thoughtful about what you share, check your privacy settings, and use common sense.
Stay informed, stay safe, and do not let privacy concerns stop you from using tools that can genuinely make your life easier. Just maybe do not tell them your deepest secrets.