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 to handle pop-ups that say a computer is infected, locked, or unsafe.
Why this helps older adults
Fear is the main tool in tech-support scams. The best AI help for seniors is practical, respectful, and slow. It should reduce confusion, not make someone feel behind or embarrassed.
A simple everyday example
A browser page says the computer is infected and gives a support number.
First safe prompt
“Explain what this pop-up might mean and list safe steps. Remind me not to call numbers shown in pop-ups.”
Beginner rule
Use placeholders like [my bank], [my doctor], [my city], or [account number removed] instead of real private details.
Useful examples
Ask AI to make a checklist, explain a letter, prepare a call script, simplify instructions, compare choices, or list questions for a trusted person.
What to avoid
Do not use AI as the final authority for money, health, legal papers, passwords, codes, benefits, insurance, or family emergencies. Let it prepare you, then verify.
Safety note
Do not call phone numbers shown in scary pop-ups or give remote access to strangers.