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Field note · Everyday AI
Published June 28, 2026 · Vita Indarra
Short answer: ChatGPT is safe for most everyday use once you manage two risks — it can be confidently wrong, and whatever you type may be stored. So you verify what you act on, and you keep sensitive things out of the box. Brilliant assistant, not oracle and not vault.
Almost everything that goes wrong with a chatbot is one of two things:
Handle those two and you've handled 95% of "is this safe?" Everything below is just how.
The same question, framed better, gets a more reliable answer. Give it the source material instead of trusting its memory ("here's the document — answer only from this"). Ask one clear thing at a time. Tell it who the answer is for and what "good" looks like. And when it matters, ask it to show its reasoning so you can see where a wrong step crept in. You're not coaxing magic out of it — you're removing the gaps it tends to fill with invention.
The single most important rule of using AI safely is about actions, not answers: don't let a chatbot have the final word on anything you can't undo. Medical or medication choices, legal filings, money decisions, anything safety-related — these get a human and a real source, every time. Use AI to draft, summarize, brainstorm, and explain. Keep it away from the decisions you can't take back.
For most everyday tasks, yes — if you verify what you act on and keep sensitive information out of the chat. It's a fast, fallible assistant, not an oracle or a vault.
Passwords, full account or card numbers, IDs, other people's private data, and confidential work material. If you wouldn't post it publicly at work, don't paste it.
Give it the source material, ask for citations you can open, tell it to admit uncertainty, and verify anything important before acting.
Go deeper
This is the short version. The full, non-technical guide — how to ask so AI lies to you less, the five tells of an invented answer, what to never trust it with, and how to handle deepfakes and the algorithms quietly deciding your life — is Don't Trust the Robot: how to use AI without getting fooled. Written by someone who builds these systems for a living. Live on Amazon.