Checklist
What not to paste into AI tools at work.
A practical safety filter for office workers before using AI.
Why this matters
Most AI anxiety starts with not knowing what is safe.
This page gives the user a simple pre-flight check before they paste anything into an AI tool. It is deliberately conservative for people using public or unclear workplace tools.
Use today
Rewrite the task without the real details.
If the AI can help with the pattern of the work, it does not need the real customer, employee, project, contract, or financial details.
Use this before your first prompt.
- Customer, client, patient, or employee names.
- Financial figures, contracts, internal strategy, or legal details.
- Passwords, API keys, personal identifiers, or private messages.
- Anything your workplace has not approved for AI use.
- Use placeholders such as [customer], [project], or [date].
- Describe the type of task instead of pasting the real document.
- Use public or generic examples while learning.
- Ask AI to help create a safe prompt before sharing context.
If your workplace rules are unclear, use the conservative default.
Use approved tools only.
If you do not know whether a personal AI account is acceptable for work content, assume it is not.
Remove real details first.
Practise with placeholders, invented examples, public information, or a description of the task pattern.
Check before sharing.
Verify names, numbers, dates, policy claims, links, and recommendations before you send or rely on the output.
Ask where review happens.
For anything affecting people, money, customers, compliance, or reputation, identify the human reviewer before using AI output.