For a moment, it looked like ChatGPT was the safe space folks needed; venting to AI about breakups, trauma, or life struggles, then maybe sharing it with a friend via a link. But that “Share” button? It had other plans.
Google started indexing ChatGPT’s shared conversations, making private exchanges searchable to anyone with the right keywords. From admissions of addiction and abuse to fears of surveillance, thousands of user-submitted chats popped up in search results—accessible to anyone who knew how to look.
The issue began when users clicked the “Share” button on ChatGPT. That button creates a unique URL—a link people might send over WhatsApp or text to a friend, or just save for later. What many didn’t realize: if the “Make this chat discoverable” option was selected, that conversation could show up in Google results.
According to reports, around 4,500 conversations were caught in this digital dragnet. While some were harmless or generic, others exposed heartbreakingly personal info—real stories of mental health battles, relationship pain, workplace stress, and more.
Though OpenAI didn’t include names, people often shared so many personal details, it wouldn’t take much to figure out who they were talking about—or who they were themselves.
OpenAI has since removed the feature, killing the option to make shared chats “discoverable.” They’re also working with Google to take down indexed links and clean up the digital spill.
For anyone who used ChatGPT’s Share feature, this is a wake-up call. If your link was public, it could still be floating out there. The best move? Check your shared chats, delete what you don’t want online, and remember—nothing on the internet is truly private. Not even your convos with a robot.
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