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Employees are leaking data over GenAI tools, here’s what enterprises need to do


Contributor Content While celebrities and newspapers like The New York Times and Scarlett Johansson are legally challenging OpenAI, the poster child of the generative AI revolution, it seems like employees have already cast their vote. ChatGPT and similar productivity and innovation tools are surging in popularity. Half of employees use ChatGPT, according to GlassDoor, and 15% paste company […]

With ChatGPT and all other GenAI tools, the sky’s the limit to what employees can achieve for the business — from drafting emails to designing complex products to solving intricate legal or accounting problems. “Since GenAI tools are highly favored by employees, the securing technology needs to be just as benevolent and accessible,” says Or Eshed, CEO and co-founder of LayerX, an enterprise browser extension company. Instead of hindering business progress or getting employees rattled about their workplace putting spokes in their productivity wheels, the idea is to keep everyone happy, and working, while making sure no sensitive information is typed or pasted into any GenAI tools, which means happier boards and shareholders as well.

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