AI Safety Tips: How to Use AI Responsibly (2026)
Last updated: May 22, 2026
AI is powerful, but it comes with responsibilities. Learn how to use AI safely, protect your privacy, and avoid common pitfalls.
Protect Your Privacy
Never Share:
- Passwords or login credentials
- Social Security numbers
- Credit card or bank account numbers
- Medical records
- Private business information
- Personal addresses or phone numbers
AI conversations may be reviewed for safety. Don’t input anything you wouldn’t want seen.
Verify AI Responses
AI can make mistakes. Always verify:
- Medical information — Consult a doctor
- Legal advice — Consult a lawyer
- Financial decisions — Consult a financial advisor
- Important facts — Cross-reference with reliable sources
- News and current events — Check multiple news sources
Understand AI Limitations
- AI doesn’t “understand” — it predicts text patterns
- AI can be confidently wrong (hallucinations)
- AI has knowledge cutoffs and may not know recent events
- AI may reflect biases from training data
- AI cannot replace human judgment for important decisions
Use AI Ethically
- Don’t cheat — Using AI to complete assignments dishonestly harms your learning
- Don’t deceive — Be transparent when AI helps create content
- Don’t spread misinformation — Verify before sharing AI-generated claims
- Respect copyright — AI-generated content may have usage restrictions
- Be kind — Don’t use AI to harass, bully, or harm others
AI and Children
- Supervise children’s AI use
- Teach kids that AI can make mistakes
- Set appropriate content filters
- Discuss privacy and what not to share
- Encourage critical thinking about AI responses
Workplace AI Policies
- Check your company’s AI usage policy
- Don’t input confidential business data into public AI tools
- Use enterprise AI tools with proper security for work tasks
- Be transparent about AI use in professional work
FAQ
Is my data safe with AI?
Read the privacy policy of each AI tool. Most major providers don’t use your data for training by default, but policies vary. When in doubt, don’t share sensitive information.
Can AI be biased?
Yes. AI models are trained on data from the internet, which contains biases. Be aware that AI responses may reflect these biases.
Should I tell people when I use AI?
In professional and academic settings, transparency about AI use is generally expected. Check your organization’s policies.
Conclusion
AI is a tool — use it wisely. Protect your privacy, verify information, and use AI ethically. More tips in our AI Tips series!
Part of our 90-day AI for Beginners series. New posts daily!