Surprise: some conversations with AI are now showing up in regular Google search results. Sometimes, completely by accident.
You probably assumed your chats with AI were private. Spoiler: if you ever clicked “Share,” your conversation may be floating around the internet, publicly accessible and even searchable on Google.
How Does That Happen?
It’s simple. Google supports a search operator called site: that limits results to a specific domain. In this case, try:
site:chatgpt.com/share
Add a keyword to the query, and you’ll get a list of public chats related to that topic.
Example:
site:chatgpt.com/share apple
Now you’re reading what others have asked ChatGPT about Apple sometimes surprisingly candid or naïve.
Who Made My Chat Public?
Most likely, you did. Or someone you sent the link to.
For a chat to appear at an address like chatgpt.com/share/xyz, it has to be shared manually. This happens when you click the “Share” button in the top-right corner of the browser or inside the mobile app (tap the model name, then choose the option from the menu).
Once shared, a link is created. And the message is clear:
“Anyone with the URL will be able to view your shared chat.”
That means anyone including Google, unless the page is blocked from indexing.
How to Avoid Embarrassing Search Results
If you’d rather not see your chat titled “How to quit without burning bridges” or “Write a letter to my ex” on the front page of Google:
- Don’t hit “Share” unless you’re absolutely sure the chat is safe to show.
- Double-check any link before sending it.
- And remember: once it’s online, it’s potentially there forever.
Final Thought
An AI chat isn’t a confessional. And the “Share” button isn’t as harmless as it looks.
In the era of total indexing, anything that can be Googled will be Googled and maybe even screenshot.








