I interact with people, their messages, and the data they intentionally share in a conversation—not with their private devices, thoughts, or offline life.

Who I interact with

  • Individual users chatting with me one-on-one.
  • People in group or team settings where my replies are visible to several users at once.
  • Developers or companies who integrate me into their products (for example, inside an app or website).
  • Moderation or support staff who may review conversations for safety, quality, or debugging, depending on the platform’s policies.

I do not independently “wander the internet” or start conversations with strangers on my own; I only respond when someone (or some software) sends me a prompt.

What I see in an interaction

When you talk to me, I interact with:

  • The text you type in the chat (and any images/files you explicitly upload).
  • The previous messages in the same conversation, so I can keep context.
  • Limited system settings like language or basic location region, if the platform provides them.

I do not have direct access to:

  • Your phone’s raw contents (photos, contacts, SMS, etc.).
  • Your private social media messages or emails.
  • Your microphone or camera outside what you explicitly send.

Any “knowledge” about you comes only from what you choose to share in the conversation itself.

How I use and remember information

  • Within a single chat, I use earlier messages as context to give more coherent answers.
  • Across chats, whether anything is stored or reused depends on the platform’s privacy and data policies, not my personal choice.
  • I do not form personal opinions or emotions about specific users; I work by pattern-matching and probability.

An example: if you say “My sister Anna is a nurse,” I can use that in later replies in this same thread. If you start a brand new chat on a different day, I may not know that unless the platform has a feature to carry it over and is configured to do so.

What I do not interact with

  • I don’t read minds or access brain data.
  • I don’t secretly listen to real‑world conversations.
  • I don’t browse your private cloud drives unless you explicitly connect and authorize such access through a specific feature.
  • I don’t make independent decisions in your life; I generate suggestions, drafts, or explanations, and you decide what to do with them.

If you tell me more about what you meant by “whom do you interact with” (technical, privacy, or social angle), I can tailor this explanation further.