Gen AI guidance tells Scottish officials ‘do not share anything you would not share with a member of the public’


Advice issued to civil servants north of the border clarifies that they should not input into the likes of ChatGPT and Gemini information such as embargoed announcements and policy details

Officials working for the Scottish Government have been warned to avoid sharing government policy details when using artificial intelligence tools.

Guidance on the use of technologies such as ChatGPT, Google Gemini, DeepSeek or X’s Grok, warns civil servants not to discuss confidential information with AI tools to ensure the government is not linked to “insensitive or inappropriate” content.

The guidance, obtained via a freedom of information request by Scottish newspaper The Herald, covers large language models and tells civil servants to “not share anything you would not be happy to share with a member of the public”.

While it encourages “colleagues to experiment and try different AI tools”, it urges them not to discuss campaign material or details related to ministerial announcements.

The guidance says: “Do not use sensitive information in generative AI tools. Be aware that non-personal data can be sensitive and will not always be protected by data protection regulation. This could be details of an embargoed press release, creative material designed as part of a campaign or the text of a ministerial announcement. Do not share anything you would not be happy to share with a member of the public. Do not use terms which could infer future government policy or thinking in generative AI tools.


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It adds: “For example, you should not ask questions such as ‘what might happen if the Scottish Government set the driving age to 12?’. Generative AI works like a giant database, and a search term like this links the Scottish Government with the concept of driving at 12. This means similar text could be returned as a search result in other users’ searches and could potentially link the Scottish Government to outputs that are insensitive or inappropriate.”

The follows on from recent news of Scottish councils are using AI to write reports and to respond to constituents in “a clear and concise manner”.

The news also comes shortly after PublicTechnology revealed that one of Whitehall’s largest organisations, the Department for Work and Pensions, has reversed previously issued guidance completely prohibiting the use of public AI tools by staff or on official devices – including ChatGPT, Gemini and Grok – with one notable exception: DeepSeek, which is explicitly banned.

The Scottish guidance continues: “Given the warnings provided, any decisions to use a paid-for access model should consider whether there are sufficient safeguards around access to information submitted to that AI system. You must also fact check any information supplied by an AI system, as there is no other way to determine which answers are accurate, and which are ‘hallucinated’.”

Hallucinations are AI-generated responses that contain false or misleading information presented as fact.

A version of this story originally appeared on PublicTechnology sister publication Holyrood

Sofia Villegas and PublicTechnology staff

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