Honest question:
Do you think about privacy when using AI?
I realized I was uploading contracts, client names, IBANs, and HR documents to AI tools that didn't need that information to do their job.
Does that risk concern you, or only after something goes wrong?
I think the interesting part is that most people do not consciously evaluate this risk every time they use AI.
The workflow becomes convenient, useful, and familiar, so the focus shifts to getting the result rather than questioning what information is being shared.
In that sense, the risk is similar to many other technology habits. It often accumulates gradually through repeated successful use rather than a deliberate decision to ignore privacy.
The challenge is that convenience provides immediate value, while the consequences of oversharing are often invisible until much later.
Convenience wins by default because the cost is invisible. That's exactly why the fix has to be in the tool, not in the behavior.
I tend to agree.
Relying on perfect behavior rarely scales because convenience almost always wins in day-to-day use.
What makes this interesting is that the same pattern shows up outside AI too. In WordPress, for example, many site issues are not caused by malicious actions or bad intentions. They happen because the easiest path in the moment also happens to be the riskiest one.
That is why I increasingly like systems that reduce the need for constant vigilance. If a risk is predictable and common enough, there is a strong argument for designing the safer path into the workflow itself rather than expecting users to remember it every time.