1. You are drafting a product announcement using AI. AI adds a performance claim — "reduces costs by 35%" — that you did not include in your brief. What should you do?
A Keep it if it sounds plausible and aligns with your general product knowledge
B Remove it only if the release is going to a regulated industry publication
C Remove or verify it — AI generated a claim it has no basis to make, and publishing unsubstantiated performance claims creates legal exposure
D Ask AI to confirm the figure is accurate before deciding whether to keep it
2. What is the primary risk of entering confidential client information into a public AI tool when drafting content?
A AI will produce lower-quality output when given confidential information
B The client's name may appear incorrectly in the final draft
C The information is processed by the AI tool in ways your organization may not have approved, creating data handling risks
D AI tools are required to disclose all inputs to regulators in certain industries
3. What is the purpose of a content risk map when using AI for communications work?
A To track which AI tools have been approved by your organization's IT department
B To measure how often AI output contains errors across different content types
C To define in advance which content types can be AI-drafted freely, which require additional review, and which should stay human-written — so the decision doesn't have to be made under pressure each time
D To identify which topics AI is most likely to hallucinate about in your industry