Edited by Omer Aktas
Listen to this page Reads only the article text, not the menu, footer, or right rail.
Ready to read this guide aloud.
Beginner rule: Use AI to slow down, ask better questions, and organize information. Do not use it as the only source for money, health, legal, or safety decisions.
Short answer
How beginners can avoid overpriced, fake, or misleading AI courses promising fast income.
Why this matters
Beginners want guidance, and scammers know that. AI-course ads can sound professional while hiding weak or recycled material.
Step-by-step
Start with the goal. Add the background. Ask for a simple format. Review the answer slowly. Then check anything important with a trusted source, official account, professional, or person who knows the situation.
Try this prompt
“Evaluate this AI course offer. List exaggerated claims, missing details, refund questions, and what I should verify before paying.”
Common beginner mistake
Many beginners paste too much private information or ask AI to decide for them. A safer habit is to ask AI to explain, organize, draft, compare, or create questions — not to make the final decision.
Safety note
Be careful with courses promising guaranteed income, secret AI tricks, or pressure to buy today.
What to do next
Use the prompt once with a harmless example. Then adjust the details, remove private information, and save the version that works best for you.