WARNING: Using AI Tools for Personal and Safe Exploration ► Start with simple, low-risk tasks. ► Such as planning a vacation, exploring gardening tips, or reviewing public reports. These are great ways to experiment with AI tools while minimizing the risk of exposing sensitive or personal information. ► Understand that your prompts may be used for training. ► Some AI tools retain user inputs to improve their models, meaning your creative ideas or unique conclusions might influence future responses given to other users. ► Be cautious when uploading attachments. ► Files you share with certain AI platforms could be stored and integrated into their broader training data, potentially making your content added to the AI library – this is described as the content helping the tool “learn.” ► Choose premium or enterprise versions for greater privacy. ► Paid or organizational versions of AI tools often include options to keep your inputs and files private and may offer features that restrict data from being used for training. Usually, a personal subscription or an “enterprise” version has the option not to share the information. Also, there are some “enterprise” versions that are installed to run completely inside a company’s computer system only (aka “Self - hosted AI” or a “Private Deployment AI”). ► For example, the footer of the Enterprise version of ChatGPT states: “ChatGPT can make mistakes. OpenAI doesn't use your workspace data to train its models.”
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