28. April 2026
AI: Use It Well
🤖 AI: Fear It, Misuse It, or Learn to Use It Well?
There is no shortage of opinions about artificial intelligence.
Some say it will take over the world. Others think it will ruin it.
In reality, AI is a tool.
And like any tool, its value depends entirely on how you use it.
🎓 What I See as an Educator
As an educator, I see students leaning on AI to write essays or complete assignments.
On the surface, it can look clever.
In practice, it skips the most important part of learning: understanding.
Without subject knowledge to guide it, AI output is often weak, vague, or just plain wrong.
The issue is not AI itself.
The issue is using it without grasping the subject matter.
🏢 How I Use AI at Positive Cyber Solutions
I use AI every day — with intent.
It helps me build parts of our website, structure blogs, and organise training content.
It speeds up research and drafting so I can focus on quality, accuracy, and clarity.
The difference is subject knowledge.
I work in cybersecurity, lecture at university, and design training aligned to frameworks such as Cyber Essentials and ISO 27001.
AI supports that work.
It does not replace expertise, evidence, or judgement.
✅ Yes, You Still Have to Fact‑Check It
AI can sound confident while being completely wrong.
If you do not have the knowledge to test what it produces, you may not even realise the output is nonsense.
Confidence is not correctness.
🧭 Use It Wisely, Not Blindly
Used without direction, AI produces poor results.
Used with clear purpose, it makes work faster, clearer, and more creative.
There is another side too.
For some people, AI provides a safe space — a way to ask questions or express concerns without feeling judged. That quieter use is often overlooked, but it matters.
💡 Final Thought
Do not fear AI.
Do not use it without thought.
Learn the tool. Understand your subject.
Use AI to support, not replace, your own knowledge.
Used well, it can help you build something better.
