Close Menu
Modern Life Today
  • Home
  • Tech
  • Smart Home
  • Energy
  • Home Security
  • Kitchen & Household
  • Outdoor
  • Home Internet
Trending Now

5 Dietitian-Approved Air Fryer Recipes for Quick Meals and Snacks

February 18, 2026

Google’s AI Overviews Can Scam You. Here’s How to Stay Safe

February 18, 2026

The Best Noise-Canceling Headphones for Traveling Are $50 Off

February 17, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Modern Life Today
  • Home
  • Tech
  • Smart Home
  • Energy
  • Home Security
  • Kitchen & Household
  • Outdoor
  • Home Internet
Subscribe
Modern Life Today
Home»Home Security»Follow These 8 Tips from Security Experts to Stay Safe When Using AI Chatbots
Home Security

Follow These 8 Tips from Security Experts to Stay Safe When Using AI Chatbots

Press RoomBy Press RoomDecember 18, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Chatting with AI is still a relatively new phenomenon. 

Though turning to chatbots for recipe ideas, travel planning and quick answers is harmless (for the most part), there are many issues to be wary of when it comes to AI safety. 

We often share highly personal information online, but the same confidentiality protections — those you enjoy with human lawyers, therapists and doctors — don’t apply to AI chatbots. Many users employ ChatGPT as a virtual life coach, sharing personal and professional details and problems through the app or program. There’s also a cognitive risk associated with using a large language model, as more studies begin to examine how reliance on chatbots affects memory retention, creativity and writing fluency.

Here’s a guide to being cautious with chatbots. We’ll walk you through why it’s important to avoid handing over sensitive data, how to navigate mental health concerns and what you can do to prevent long-term cognitive atrophy due to not exercising certain parts of your brain.


Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.


1. Treat AI chatbots as public environments 

Remember that AI chatbots are “public environments,” not private conversations, says Matthew Stern, a cyber investigator and CEO at CNC Intelligence. 

“If we keep that in mind, we will be less likely to share sensitive data that may become visible to others,” Stern says.

Since chatbot histories have become searchable online, Stern says to be concerned about your conversations getting indexed by search engines. 

Avoid sharing any personally identifiable information, such as your full name, address, financial details, business data and medical results. The more you share, the more personalized your results will be. Sure, that might sound like a good thing on the surface. 

But handing over sensitive data to a tech company should give you pause. Even if those details don’t become publicly searchable, you never know what information data brokers will be buying and selling about you.

2. Don’t overshare your mental state

Chatbots can be useful assistants, but they aren’t your friends, says Elie Berreby, the head of SEO and AI Search at Adorama. He suggests “guarding your secrets” and never discussing your mental state, fears or health concerns. Such data can be used to identify hidden patterns and subconscious intentions, creating a vulnerability profile. 

“Do not overshare. They already know more about you than you could imagine,” says Berreby. 

Also, keep in mind that the primary goal of AI chatbots is monetization, i.e., to generate revenue. 

“Soon, this personalization will be used to show you ultra-targeted ads,” he says. “This data is priceless for advertisers, but it creates a surveillance profile deeper than anything we’ve seen until now.”

3. Don’t ‘bring your whole self’ to the chatbot 

AI chatbots exist within attention economies, where your engagement is the product, says Intercultural Strategist Annalisa Nash Fernandez.

“If chatbots ultimately monetize through data collection and user retention, memory features become engagement tools disguised as personalization, because attention is upstream of everything, including your privacy,” she says.

Disable memory features to reduce what the systems retain about you. For ChatGPT, navigate to Settings > Personalization > turn off Memory and Record Mode.

Use secondary email addresses, so that chatbots don’t have this type of identifier for you — emails are “the connective tissue linking disparate data points,” Fernandez says.

Opt out of training, so the chatbot won’t train itself on your inputs. In ChatGPT, click on your profile/name, select Settings > then Improve the model for everyone > and turn it off. 

Berreby also advises you to “fragment your data” by switching between different AI chatbots to avoid giving one single entity a complete picture of your life. 

4. Export your data 

Whichever AI chatbot you’re using, regularly export your data to see what information it has stored about you. 

In ChatGPT, go to Settings > Data Controls > Export Data. It’ll email you a link with a ZIP file of text and photos. 

5. Fact-check everything 

Always err on the side of caution with AI-generated content. Expect errors and approach information with doubt. AI chatbots are designed to be helpful — they’re the ultimate people pleaser. This doesn’t mean the information is true or accurate. 

Cognitive bias is also an issue with chatbots. If you’re using it as a thought partner, it will mirror back what you put in, essentially becoming an ultimate echo chamber.

Always check its sources and ask where it obtained the information. AI hallucinations also occur, where chatbots falsify information based on either unreliable online sources or by drawing incorrect conclusions.

6. Watch out for sneaky scammers

AI chatbots are capable of maintaining multiturn conversations, says Ron Kerbs, CEO of Kidas, a company that protects against scams and online threats. These back-and-forth interactions could be mimicked by bad actors on dodgy websites posing as helpful customer service chatbots. 

“While large platforms like ChatGPT are generally secure, the risk lies in users unintentionally sharing access credentials through phishing links or fake login pages, often distributed via email, SMS or cloned websites,” Kerbs says. “Once credentials are compromised, a scammer could misuse the account, especially if it’s linked to saved payment methods.”

Kerbs says you must enable two-factor authentication, monitor account access and avoid logging in through third-party links. That might be less convenient, but it’s a small price to pay. 

While there’s no antivirus equivalent for AI chatbots yet, some tools offer scam detection as a layer of everyday protection, especially when embedded within messaging platforms and service providers. 

Kerbs says it’s essential not only to scan your hard drive for viruses, but also to monitor your interactions via SMS, email and voice calls for potential scams. Deepfake protection can also analyze audio and video to detect if the person you’re speaking to is an AI clone. 

7. Confide in people, not AI 

This tip isn’t tactical, but it’s important: While you might see no harm in speaking to ChatGPT, Claude or Gemini about a problem you’re having, it’s a slippery slope to using a chatbot as a diary.

Instead, call up a good friend or plan a catch-up to share what you’re going through with someone who cares about you — not a predictive AI model that’s been trained by strangers.

8. Practice (and protect) critical thinking 

Don’t outsource your thinking to AI. An ongoing MIT study (yet to be peer-reviewed) conducted a preliminary exploration of the potential for large language models to be detrimental to our mental state, showing “weaker neural connectivity” in the brains of participants who used ChatGPT.

Use AI for low-level tasks, but keep the creating, thinking and strategizing out of the algorithms. 

Here are the best things to use AI for, as well as the worst. 

(Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against ChatGPT maker OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)



Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Keep Your Home Protected As Presidents Day Drops the Ring Outdoor Cam Plus to $70

February 16, 2026

This Palm-Reading Smart Lock Is Practically Magic, and It’s $120 Off at Amazon

February 10, 2026

What Amazon Ring’s New ‘Search Party’ Feature Means for Your Privacy

February 10, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top Articles

All the Pet Tech That Stood Out at CES 2026

January 8, 2026

Premier League Soccer: Stream Bournemouth vs. Tottenham Live

January 7, 2026

Best Mobile VPN of 2026: Enjoy Privacy Protection on the Go

February 6, 2026

Apple’s Next M5 MacBook Pros Could Drop With MacOS 26.3

February 3, 2026
Don't Miss

Gamers Can Save a Massive $800 on This Mega 57-Inch Samsung Neo G9 Curved Monitor

By Press RoomFebruary 17, 20260

If you’re in search of a ginormous gaming monitor, the Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 57-inch…

How Much Can a New Fridge Actually Save You? The Surprising Truth About Energy

February 17, 2026

Prices Are Ticking Up on Presidents Day Favorites. We’ve Gathered the Best Deals Still Remaining Here

February 17, 2026

Preorder the Lymow One Plus Lawn Mower for $500 Off

February 17, 2026
About Us
About Us

Modern Life Today is your one-stop website for the latest gadget and technology news and updates, follow us now for the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube
Featured News

LG’s First Dolby FlexConnect Soundbar Lets You Place Speakers Anywhere

December 18, 2025

Follow These 8 Tips from Security Experts to Stay Safe When Using AI Chatbots

December 18, 2025

The Oscars Shift to YouTube-Only Streaming Starting in 2029

December 18, 2025
Trending Now

Today’s NYT Connections Hints, Answers for Dec. 18 #921

December 18, 2025

Got ‘Elf’ and ‘Grinch’ Burnout? Watch These Unconventional Christmas Movies Instead

December 18, 2025

You’re Probably Not Washing Your Sheets Enough. Here’s the Timeline You Should Follow

December 18, 2025
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.