People keep feeding company secrets to ChatGPT

Causing serious privacy and governance headaches

By David Braue, Feb 2024 
https://ia.acs.org.au/content/ia/article/2024/people-keep-feeding-company-secrets-to-chatgpt.html


Be careful what you put into AI engines because it could be divulged elsewhere.

(Nb The APS is now beginning a six-month trial of Microsoft’s 365 Copilot)


Privacy budgets are being cut even as workers feed generative AI systems 
sensitive data about employees, customers, internal processes and non-public 
business details – with new data highlighting the risks that have seen the 
technology banned by a quarter of ANZ businesses.

Fully 53 per cent of respondents to the Cisco 2024 Data Privacy Benchmark Study 
– which surveyed over 2,600 security professionals in Australia and 11 other 
countries – said they have used internal process details when shaping queries 
to ChatGPT and other genAI engines.

Around a third of respondents said they had done the same with employee data, 
non-public company material, and customer information.

Doing so has become a growing privacy and security concern because genAI 
continually trains itself based on the content of user prompts – potentially 
regurgitating that information to others.


Indeed, Cisco found, 77 per cent of respondents believe data entered into genAI 
systems could be shared publicly or with competitors, with 69 per cent 
concerned that use of genAI could hurt their organisation’s legal and 
intellectual property rights.

This had led over half of surveyed organisations to limit the types of data 
that can be entered into genAI systems, restrict the kind of genAI tools that 
can be used at work, or outright ban the tools as 27 per cent of organisations 
Cisco surveyed have done.

That’s a sobering contrast to widespread enthusiasm for genAI tools – which, 
security firm Indusface found in a recent survey of over 2,000 UK businesses, 
are being used for tasks such as writing up reports, translations, research, 
client emails, and internal emails.

Such use cases may seem like clear productivity boosters to employees, but 
Indusface founder and president Venky Sundar warned that they can easily become 
something else altogether.

“When you share proprietary information into ChatGPT, there’s always a risk 
that this data is available for the general public,” he said, noting that 55 
per cent of surveyed companies don’t trust working with another business that 
uses genAI tools in their workplace.

With 39 per cent of advertising, 38 per cent of legal, and 28 per cent of 
government and defence firms saying they utilise ChatGPT, Sundar warned of the 
risks of exposure and reputational damage through inadvertent data leakage.

“You may lose your IP,” he explained, “so never ask ChatGPT for documentation 
on proprietary documents including product roadmaps, patents, and so on… The 
maturity level of addressing the data, and ownership of trust, is still not 
well defined and businesses are right in not trusting it completely.”


Such warnings come too late for the Australian Public Service, which is 
redoubling its commitment to digitise operations and in January followed major 
corporates AGL, Bupa and NAB by beginning a six-month trial of Microsoft’s 365 
Copilot productivity tools that, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said, will 
allow APS staff “to trial new ways to innovate and enhance productivity.”

Exacerbating a privacy shortfall

Amidst concerns that lawmakers are not moving fast enough to regulate the 
technology’s safety, rampant and uncontrolled use of genAI – which is being 
integrated into all manner of business and personal technologies – is 
challenging the still immature privacy practices of Australian businesses 
staring down the barrel of the most significant Privacy Act changes since 2014.

Despite the potential impact of those looming changes, new figures point to a 
yawning gap in privacy awareness and practice – with just 39 per cent of 
Oceania respondents to ISACA’s Privacy in Practice 2024 survey calling their 
organisation’s privacy obligations “straightforward” and just 44 per cent 
confident of meeting data privacy obligations.

“Every organisation in ANZ and across the world has a responsibility to protect 
the privacy of its customer and stakeholder data,” said ISACA Oceania 
ambassador Jo Stewart-Rattray, who noted that with governments “updating 
legislation to ensure best practice… It is paramount that organisations 
understand what is expected of them to devise an effective privacy policy and 
implement accordingly.”

Jo Stewart-Rattray is Vice President of Community Boards at ACS, the publisher 
of Information Age.

In 2024, DoorDash head of technical privacy Nandita Rao Narla noted in response 
to the ISACA survey, ‘effective privacy’ will necessarily involve addressing AI 
risks, with privacy professionals “likely [to] see their roles expand to 
include responsible AI management” as they are directed to “build sustainable 
AI governance programs and extend safeguards for AI use cases.”

Yet even as CIOs increase their spending on AI systems and genAI tools, 51 per 
cent of privacy professionals said they are expecting a decrease in their 
budget – far more than a year ago, when just 12 per cent anticipated budget 
cuts.

Reconciling those two competing pressures will be a key issue as genAI becomes 
ever more capable during 2024, yet knowledge about how to do this is still 
evolving – with the Australian Cyber Security Centre the latest organisation to 
offer guidance about managing AI risk.

“Privacy has become inextricably tied to customer trust and loyalty,” noted 
Cisco vice president and chief privacy officer Harvey Jang. “They are looking 
for hard evidence the organisation can be trusted…. This is even more true in 
the era of AI, where better investing in privacy positions organisations to 
leverage AI ethically and responsibly.”



DAVID BRAUE is an award-winning technology journalist who has covered 
Australia’s technology industry since 1995. A lifelong technophile, he has 
written and edited content for a broad range of audiences across myriad topics, 
with a particular focus on the intersection of technological innovation and 
business transformation.
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