👋 Happy Taco Tuesday, friend.Somewhere between a sci-fi movie and a food truck fever dream, tacos have apparently become a testing ground for the future. From zero-gravity tortilla talk to machines chasing Michelin chef status, this is nacho average trivia.
Which of these actually happened? A) A robot chef made 400 tacos an hour, B) NASA tested soft taco shells in zero gravity, C) Someone 3D-printed a taco, using ground cricket protein or D) All of the above? Take your best bite at it, the answer is tucked at the end.
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ChatGPT's memory feature is on by default for most people.
It saves your personal details across every conversation and builds a growing profile on you.
You can view, delete or disable it completely.
📖 Read time: 2 minutes
You've been telling ChatGPT things. Your job. Your health questions. Your money stress. Your relationship stuff. Maybe your kids' names. Your city. Your age. And ChatGPT has been writing it all down.
OpenAI's memory feature isn't hidden. But most people have no idea it's been running in the background this whole time, no idea what it's saved and no idea how to check. That's the problem.
😶🌫️ Here's what you need to know
Memory works across all your chats automatically. Every conversation, ChatGPT can flag details it thinks are worth keeping about you: your title at work, where you live, physical conditions you've casually mentioned. It takes note of your communication style, family situation, political leanings and financial picture.
Over time, it builds a personal profile that travels with you from conversation to conversation. Not a short one, either. I checked mine. It knew things I'd completely forgotten I'd told it. Go look at yours.
👉 Open ChatGPT on your phone or computer. Click your profile picture in the bottom left on desktop, or the menu on mobile. Go to Settings > Personalization > Memory.
You'll see a running list of everything it has stored. Some entries will be totally harmless. Others will make you do a double-take. Seriously.
🔍 3 moves to make right now
You've got options.
Delete. If individual memories feel too personal, hit the trash icon next to any entry you want gone.
Turn memory off entirely. Toggle it off under Settings > Personalization > Memory, and ChatGPT stops adding to the file. FYI, turning memory off is a two-way street. ChatGPT won't build a profile on you anymore, but it also won't remember a single thing about you. Your preferences. How you like things explained. Gone. Every conversation starts cold, like you just met. For some people, that's exactly the point. For others, it makes the tool genuinely less useful. Only you know which side of that line you're on.
Memory lane closed. Use Temporary Chat for anything sensitive. Start a new chat and select Temporary Chat from the top. Nothing from that session gets stored. Not a word.
🔐 The step people completely skip
OpenAI trains its AI models on your conversations unless you tell it not to. Memory data included.
👉 To opt out, go to Settings > Data Controls and turn off Improve the model for everyone. One toggle. Thirty seconds. Done.
Deleting a memory from your list doesn't scrub it from OpenAI's servers. For a full data removal, submit a deletion request at privacy.openai.com. And if you're on a ChatGPT Team or Enterprise plan, memory is off by default. Lucky you.
📩 Send this to someone who uses ChatGPT every day and has zero clue this is happening. That's the kind of friend you want to be. Use the share links below.
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These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results may vary.
📺 PODCAST: THE KIM KOMANDO SHOW
Don't just listen! Watch!
Shelly's dad died in a 1984 plane crash. That chapter of her life closed. Then she took a 23andMe test that found three surprise sisters. But is the DNA truth or a fraud? Plus, the FCC bans foreign-made routers, Gen Z ignores work emails and three tech myths busted.
🎧 Or search "Komando" wherever you get your podcasts. I'm everywhere.
WEB WATERCOOLER
🧯 Microsoft whiplash: Oops, Windows did it again. It's getting to the point where you see Windows error code and immediately start browsing laptops like you're leaving a bad relationship. This weekend, Microsoft pushed Windows 11 preview update KB5079391, some PCs got stuck failing with error 0x80073712, and Microsoft pulled it after about two hours. The company says your PC is fine, the install belly-flopped. Small victory for those renegades hitting "Remind me tomorrow" as a spiritual practice.
Bot blackmail got worse: There's a new scam in town: castfishing. Not to be confused with catfishing, it's a combo of romance scam and sextortion pressure tactics. Scammers use AI to make fake identities of actors and celebs, build intimate connections with their victim, then demand money or explicit content under threat of exposure. If someone impossibly attractive slides into your messages and things move unusually fast, slow down. That manufactured warmth is the red flag. Brad Pitt isn't in your DMs asking for $200 on Cash App.
🧢Out! Robots win again: A robot ump drew its first blood. A Minnesota Twins manager became the first guy tossed thanks to robot ump tech after the automated ball-strike system made a call and he barked back anyway. Baseball's oldest tradition was yelling at a guy in black. For 150 years, managers could at least get in an ump's face. Now? They're basically screaming at a spreadsheet in cleats. I'll miss the dirt-kicking finales.
Hiring shouldn't feel like a nightmare: It's nuts. You post a job and get buried in unqualified applicants, wasting hours hoping for one gem. Stop guessing and start hiring smarter. LinkedIn Hiring Pro connects you with top candidates fast, and right now, you can get $100 off your first post. Grab this deal while it lasts.*
🎛️ Pick your poison: Ever wish you could tell a social app, no, I don't need 14 ragebait posts with my morning coffee? Bluesky is testing AI tools (Attie) that let you write your own feed rules instead of choking down the default algorithm. So, yes, you can bury bait, boost your weird little hobbies and stop some invisible engagement goblin from programming your morning. I don't really use it, but I love the idea of an app that doesn't act like a casino with push alerts.
📱 Scroll, wrinkle, repeat: Ever catch your reflection mid-scroll and think oof? There's a name for that. Dermatologists call it tech neck (paywall link), and a skin doc says staring down at your phone for hours can deepen the horizontal lines across your throat over time. Skin care companies heard of the problem and immediately thought money. There are creams, silicone patches and LED collars designed to fix what your posture broke. I miss when slouching got you a lecture from your mom. Now it gets you a $90 serum.
🎤 PODCAST: DAILY TECH UPDATE
AI decodes annoying corporate speak
Have you ever been in a meeting and had no idea what anyone was saying? Been there, done that. AI is jumping in to translate irritating corporate buzzwords. I'll break down the most annoying ones and what they actually mean.
🎧 Or search "Komando" wherever you get your podcasts. I'm everywhere.
KIM'S DAILY DEALS
⏰ Ends today! Amazon's Big Spring Sale!
You'll kick yourself if you miss these tech steals.
🎥 Max control:Blink Mini(50% off, $15) 4.4 ⭐ 308,900+ reviews
Secure more, stress less. Ring's budget-friendly cousin sets up fast. You'll get clear 1080p video day or night, plus motion alerts. Talk through it with Alexa to check in on pets or packages anytime.
Image: Amazon
📄 Shred your secrets: Bonsaii's micro cut shredder(31% off, $85) tears through 12 sheets at once. Handles credit cards, stables and clips, too.
Sort like a boss: This label maker(48% off, $17) doesn't need ink or toner. Just open the app, pick a template and print clean labels in seconds.
🚗 Fast (charging) lane: Lisen's retractable car charger(35% off, $16) has built-in 31.5-inch cords. Power up to four phones at once. No cable mess.
Crush your goals: The tiny Fitbit Inspire 3(30% off, $70) tracks your sleep, heart rate, workouts and more. Helps you feel and move better all day.
Prices and deals were accurate at the time of publication.
DEVICE ADVICE
⚡️ 3-second tech genius: Printer jamming constantly? Fan the paper before you load it. Sheets stick together from humidity and feed as doubles, triggering the jam sensor. Repairmen call it "paper conditioning." You'll call this tip amazing.
Facebook has a privacy tool nobody runs: Open the mobile app, and head to Settings > Tools and resources > Privacy Checkup. Meta takes you through who can see your posts, your profile details and how people can find you. Edit as you go. It's one of those rare guided tools that's actually worth tapping through. Do it once.
🔐 A credit freeze is so 1990s: A credit freeze won't stop someone from opening bank accounts, filing fake tax returns or using your info in data breaches. You need real protection that monitors the dark web, leaks and identity threats a freeze can't touch. I used to have LifeLock, but it got so expensive. That's why I switched and got more protection for less money. Here's what I use, and now, get 79% off with my exclusive link.*
WhatsApp fixed three things people have screamed about for years: Delete large files inside a chat without losing the conversation. Tap the chat name > Manage Storage. Move your entire chat history from iPhone to Android under Chats > Transfer chat history > Transfer to Android. Plus, you can have two WhatsApp accounts logged in simultaneously on one iPhone. About time.
💻 Windows can lock itself when you walk away: It's called "Dynamic lock." Pair your phone to your PC over Bluetooth, and Windows locks automatically when your phone moves out of range. Go to Settings > Accounts > Sign-in options > Dynamic lock to set it up. Perfect for those who stand up for "two seconds" and leave their entire digital life open on the desk. You know who you are.
🎙️ Google has been keeping a diary on you: Go to myactivity.google.com and sign in. Every search you've typed, every YouTube video you've watched, every place Maps took you, time-stamped, going back years. Click Voice and Audio under the filter and you can hear recordings of your own voice from past Google searches. I pulled mine up and found audio going back to 2019. There's no polite way to describe what that felt like. Go look. The file on you is bigger than you think.
WHAT THE TECH?
Image: Eddie Dalton
🎤 Now that's what I call fiction
Your new favorite artist doesn't exist. AI creator Dallas Little put three songs in the iTunes top five under a fake singer named Eddie Dalton, who has never drawn a breath, missed a rehearsal or signed a bad record deal.
Completely legal. Platforms don't care.
😱 A CISAC study says musicians could lose 24% of their income to AI by 2028. That's not simply a prediction. Deezer already flags 10,000 AI-generated tracks every day. Real artists getting ghosted by actual ghosts.
I should have more sympathy. My parents gave me piano lesson money every week, and I walked straight to the 7-Eleven instead. Came home playing "Twinkle, Twinkle" for a year. Dad finally said, "Piano is not your thing. And no more 7-Eleven." At least I was honest about my talent. Eddie Dalton isn't. Give it a listen.
🔜 Tomorrow: One engineer built Gmail as a side project. Four executives laughed at tech and lost everything. And those robot CAPTCHA tests? You weren't proving you're human. This is the story nobody tells and it will be in your inbox tomorrow morning.
The answer: D) All of the above. Yes, really. A robot chef (named Flippy) did crank out 400 tacos an hour, NASA floated soft taco shells in microgravity because bread leaves crumbs, and someone 3D-printed a cricket taco because techies don't believe in limits (or normal lunches).
🌮 So if you ever feel weird about your life choices, remember: Somewhere, there's a bug-based space taco orbiting Earth, probably made by a robot. And today, Taco Bell is providing more value than ever. Where else can you get gas for $1.19? (You'll use that one, I know it!)
🏆 THE KIM CHALLENGE:Forward this to ONE person who needs to hear it today. Pick the person who popped into your head while reading. You know who it is.
🧠 A sharper mind makes a lighter day. Keep it fed like you are by getting my free newsletter every single day. — Kim
Kim Komando • Komando.com • 510+ radio stations • Trusted by millions daily
Companies and products denoted by an asterisk (*) within this publication are paid sponsors or advertisements. As an Amazon Associate, the publisher earns from qualifying purchases. Statements regarding products denoted by a double asterisk (**) have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration; such products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. This newsletter is provided for informational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, medical, or professional advice of any kind. Readers should consult with a qualified professional before making any decisions based on this content. The publisher disclaims all liability for any loss, damage, or injury resulting from the use of or reliance on the information contained herein.
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Keep a civil tongue.