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If you’re one of the 900 million people who reportedly use ChatGPT every week, the chatbot might be a staple of life. Maybe it helps you get work done or come up with meal plans. You might even consult it whenever you have a scuffle with a friend or family member. 

But as you turn to ChatGPT for increasingly more in your life, you may want to re-evaluate how much personal information you’re disclosing along the way. Ideally, you know not to disclose sensitive financial information — but other details about you could also be worth shielding. 

Also: I put GPT-5.5 through a 10-round test: It got a near-perfect score

(Disclosure: Ziff Davis, ZDNET’s parent company, filed an April 2025 lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

Privacy experts are already sounding the alarm about the potential harms of saying too much to your chatbot. The underlying concern is that no one is entirely sure how your personal information, whether sensitive or seemingly innocuous, could be used in the future. Some fear personal data could end up in a mass surveillance system or be used in other unforeseen ways that will ultimately harm or disadvantage you. 

That ambiguity, they argue, is reason enough for caution. 

Here are five ways you can better manage the amount of personal information ChatGPT has about you, if you’re using a consumer account. 

1. Opt out of training data

One step you can take to make your ChatGPT experience more secure is to stop OpenAI from using your information to train its models. Security experts are voicing concern that if your data ends up in a model, it could one day be used in a way we can’t even anticipate right now.

Go to Settings > Data controls > Improve the model for everyone. Then toggle the switches off and click “Done.”

Also: OpenAI is training models to ‘confess’ when they lie – what it means for future AI

You can also use OpenAI’s privacy portal to “Make a Privacy Request.” Select “I have a consumer ChatGPT account,” and then “Do not train on my content.” From there, you might be prompted to sign in. After that step, you’ll see a button to “Submit Request.” 

This technique only applies to your data in ChatGPT moving forward.

2. Delete old chats 

Another action you can take to clean up the information you’ve given to ChatGPT is to delete old chats. There are two ways to do this. One is to go to Settings > Data controls > Delete all chats.

You can also delete individual chats from the left-hand sidebar by clicking the three dots next to the name of the chat. 

Also: How to clean up your digital footprint – and why it matters more than you think

Although the conversation will disappear from your chat history immediately, it can take up to 30 days to be permanently deleted from OpenAI’s systems, according to the company’s website

OpenAI also stipulates two exceptions where this rule might not apply: circumstances where the company has to hang on to data for “security or legal obligations” or because the data has been “de-identified and disassociated from your account.” 

3. Use temporary chats

If you don’t want to keep up with deleting chats as you go, you can use ChatGPT’s temporary chats. A temporary chat will not appear in your history, nor will it reference anything from previous conversations or memories. It will not be used for training data, either. 

Similar to the retention policy for deleted chats, OpenAI might hold a copy of your temporary chat for up to 30 days, according to an FAQ page.

To start a temporary chat, click the button labeled “Temporary” in the bottom-right of a new chat. 

For some ChatGPT users, this might lead to a less personalized experience, as ChatGPT won’t be able to learn anything new about you that might inform future responses. 

4. Manage memories

The idea behind memories is for ChatGPT to retain certain chat details that could, in theory, make the chatbot more useful over time. For example, you might ask it to remember that you have a dog or are vegan.

According to ChatGPT’s FAQ on memories, there are two main settings you can use to control memory.

Also: 11 ways to delete or hide yourself from the internet

You can go to Settings > Personalization and then click the “Manage” button next to “Memory.” That step will pull up a list of saved memories that you can either delete altogether or individually. You can also toggle off the switches for “Reference saved memories” and “Reference chat history.”

OpenAI might also keep a log of saved memories for up to 30 days.

5. Delete your account

It’s a more extreme measure, but you can always delete your account altogether. It’s a permanent move, though, so be sure it’s what you want. One way to do this is to go to OpenAI’s privacy portal and “Make a Privacy Request.” Select “I have a consumer ChatGPT account,” and then “Delete my ChatGPT account.” 

You can also go to Settings > Account and then click “Delete” under “Delete account. According to OpenAI, you can only do this if you logged on within the last 10 minutes; otherwise, you’ll have to sign in again. From there, you will have to type in your email to confirm and “DELETE,” which will unlock the “Permanently delete my account” button. Finally, click that button.

How to find out what ChatGPT knows 

If you’re unsure of how much information you’ve given ChatGPT — and whether you should take any of the steps above — there’s a way you can get a fairly comprehensive idea of what the chatbot knows about you. Just ask ChatGPT.

My editor, Aly Windsor, asked ChatGPT directly how much it knew about her. It replied with a thorough list of personal details she’d shared with it. She then asked it to produce a prompt that could succinctly spell out everything it knew about her in a scannable profile, and fed the prompt back to ChatGPT. You can try the same approach. You might be surprised by what and how much it returns. 





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RAM prices have soared in the last year, and what used to be an inexpensive component to upgrade now can cost as much as a GPU used to. If your PC is running low on RAM, there are a few things you can do to mitigate the problem.

Increase your virtual memory space

Almost as good as adding RAM

Two sticks of SK Hynix laptop RAM. Credit: Ismar Hrnjicevic / How-To Geek

If your PC actually runs out of RAM, your PC will lag, freeze, or even crash completely.

To prevent that from happening, Windows (and other operating systems) reserve a small amount of space on your storage drive to act as virtual memory. That virtual memory can be written to much like RAM, and in an emergency, it’ll allow your PC to keep running where it would have otherwise become completely inoperable.

When PCs still used mechanical hard drives for their boot drives, virtual memory tended to be extremely slow, which meant that the performance hit you’d take using it was enormous. It was literally limited by the speed the disc could spin at and how fast the arm could move.

Mechanical hard drives with the covers removed and disks exposed.


Are Mechanical Hard Drives Really Obsolete?

The reports of HDD death have been greatly exaggerated.

Solid-state drives (SSDs) have improved the situation quite a bit. Even SATA SSDs can move several hundred megabytes of data per second, and some PCIe NVMe SSDs have transfer rates measured in the gigabytes per second. Today, the fastest PCIe 5.0 SSDs are theoretically faster than DDR4, though real-world constraints often mean that NVMe drives are still somewhat slower.

Whatever SSD you’re using, virtual memory can meaningfully improve your performance if you’re using a PC with limited RAM but a fast internal drive.

Increasing the size of the Page File

To increase the size of your Page File on Windows 11, open the Settings app by pressing Windows+i, then navigate to System > About > Advanced system settings. Within the System Properties window, click the Advanced tab, then click Settings (under Performance), and select the Advanced tab in the new window.

Finally, click Change under Virtual Memory. From there, you just need to disable the default system settings by unchecking Automatically manage paging file sizes for all drives at the top and selecting Custom Size towards the bottom.

Windows will tell you the minimum and recommended sizes at the bottom, but if you want to allocate more, you can as long as you have the free space on your drive. Mine was set to 2048MB by default, so I upped it to 8192MB (8GB) instead.

Disable unnecessary startup applications

No one wanted Teams to launch automatically

The apps running in Task Manager.

Whenever you install a new application on Windows, you’re usually given the option to add it to the start menu or the desktop, and sometimes, you’re given the option to have the application start whenever your PC boots up.

Unfortunately, some apps will add themselves to the auto startup list without ever asking you.

If your PC is low on RAM, preventing applications from automatically launching is the first thing you should try.

Remove automatic startup applications

To disable Startup Applications, press Ctrl+Shift+Esc, then go to the Startup apps tab. From there, you can right-click apps and select Disable to turn them off.

Go to the Startup apps tab, then right-click any app to remove it from the auto-start list.

If you find that you miss something starting automatically, you can always come back and re-enable them.

Double-check Task Scheduler

Scheduled tasks can eat up RAM when you least expect it

Windows 11 laptop and the Task Scheduler icon in the center. Credit: Lucas Gouveia/How-To Geek

Unfortunately, not every application that will automatically start is listed in the Startup Apps menu in the Task Manager. Some applications use the Task Scheduler instead. The Task Scheduler can be used to launch an application at a specific time, after certain conditions have been met, or a set time after a restart.

Normally, Task Scheduler is used to ensure updates are downloaded and installed in a timely fashion, or that certain routine maintenance occurs when it should. Those are both important, and I wouldn’t recommend disabling them unless you need to.

Unfortunately, if your PC doesn’t have any RAM to spare, an unexpected update can mean the difference between a PC that is working as expected and a PC that is laggy.

If you’re really short on RAM, you can go through Task Scheduler and remove anything you don’t want to run automatically. However, you will probably need to perform those updates manually whenever you use the program instead.

Removing a scheduled job from the Task Scheduler

To remove a scheduled task, press the Windows key and search for Task Scheduler, then launch the application.

Open up the folder hierarchy on the left and go through the scheduled jobs one-by-one. When you find one you want to disable, right-click it and select Disable. Don’t delete it. If you delete it, you’ll need to manually recreate the task if you ever want to reenable it, which can be tedious.

A scheduled task visible in task Scheduler.


Don’t delete essential Windows services to save RAM

If you’ve disabled every app you can, gone through the Task Scheduler, and increased your paging file size and you’re still having RAM issues, you have one choice left: Start removing apps to guarantee they can’t run. In the case of Windows services, you probably can’t remove them completely, but you can disable them in the Services app.



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