
It can be safe to let an AI remember some personal details if the app has clear privacy controls, transparent memory settings, and you are selective about what you share. But not every detail should be saved.
Low-risk memories might include your preferred tone, planning style, favorite reminder format, or general routine. Higher-risk information includes sensitive health details, financial information, legal issues, passwords, private messages, or personal data about other people. Treat those with caution.
Before using memory features, check whether you can view, edit, delete, or disable memory. Also review the app's official privacy policy and data controls. A personal AI should make memory feel helpful, not hidden.
The practical rule is to verify controls before sharing deeply. Check whether memory can be viewed, edited, disabled, or deleted, and whether the app explains retention and training practices. If those answers are hard to find, keep the information general and avoid sensitive details.
Treat memory as an allowlist, not a diary. Decide in advance which categories of information may be remembered, such as preferences and routines, and keep health, finances, and identity details out by default.