Edited by Omer Aktas
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Beginner rule: Use AI as a patient helper, not as the final authority. Keep private details out, slow down before clicking, and check important information through official sources.
Short answer
How seniors can prepare a safe response when someone calls claiming to be technical support.
Why this helps older adults
Support scams work by sounding helpful and urgent. The goal is not to make a senior learn every AI feature. The goal is to make one practical task easier while keeping privacy, money, health, and family safety in view.
A simple everyday example
A caller says there is a virus and wants to connect to the senior’s computer.
First safe prompt
“Create a safe response script for a surprise tech support call. Tell me when to hang up and how to verify.”
Beginner rule
Start with harmless information. Replace names, phone numbers, account numbers, addresses, passwords, codes, and medical record details with simple placeholders.
Useful examples
Good uses include asking for a clearer explanation, a polite message, a checklist, a question list, a call script, a reminder plan, or a safer way to verify something.
What to avoid
Do not let AI make medical, legal, financial, or family decisions for you. Use it to prepare and simplify, then confirm important steps with a trusted person or official source.
Safety note
Never give remote access, payment, passwords, or one-time codes to surprise support callers.