Nearly two in five workers use unauthorized AI tools at work — here’s why companies are concerned
AI can help boost productivity, but there's a lot at risk if employees aren't careful
Employees everywhere are quietly using AI at work. And while a recent study shows that more than half of U.S. companies encourage it, a new report highlighted by the Japanese tech publication TechTarget Japan warns that “Shadow AI” is becoming one of the fastest-growing problems inside modern workplaces. The issue is, employees aren't using official company-approved AI or even AI-proofed workflows.
The term "Shadow AI" might sound familiar because it mirrors the old “Shadow IT” era when employees quietly downloaded unauthorized apps and cloud software to get work done faster. Except with AI, the stakes are much higher.
Instead of sneaking Slack alternatives or Dropbox accounts into the office, workers are now pasting confidential documents, meeting notes, internal strategy plans, financial data, customer information and source code directly into AI systems like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google Gemini and other generative AI tools. And in many companies, leadership has no idea how widespread it already is.
Why 'Shadow AI' is exploding right now
The reason is that AI genuinely helps people work faster. Employees are seeing success using AI for overflowing inboxes, impossible workloads and constant pressure to produce more with less.
AI can summarize meetings instantly, rewrite emails, generate reports, organize ideas, analyze spreadsheets, brainstorm presentations and speed up coding. Once workers realize they can save hours every week, many start using AI whether their company approves it or not.
That’s where the problem begins.
According to reporting from TechTarget Security, a survey conducted by CybSafe and the National Cybersecurity Alliance found that more than 38% of employees admitted to sharing sensitive information with AI tools without employer permission.
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According to the report, companies are struggling because AI traffic often looks like normal web activity. Employees can use browser tabs, extensions or personal accounts without IT departments noticing.
In other words, your company may already have hundreds of employees using AI behind the scenes.
The scary part isn’t the AI — it’s the data
Most people assume the biggest AI risk is the model itself. But security experts are increasingly warning that the real issue is what employees feed into these systems. If a worker pastes confidential information into a public AI chatbot, that data may leave company-controlled environments, become stored externally, create compliance issues, expose intellectual property or violate privacy regulations.
When workers believe AI helps them perform better, many simply move usage underground — creating even more “Shadow AI.” But what makes this story especially interesting is that it highlights a growing divide happening across the tech world right now, which is the convenience side and privacy side. Cloud AI tools are fast, powerful and deeply integrated into everyday workflows. But as more users start to question where their data goes, how much AI knows about them and who can access the data, the price of convenience might not be worth the tradeoff.
This could explain why local AI, on-device AI, zero-knowledge AI systems and private AI workflows are becoming more popular. People still want AI assistance, they just don't want all their information flowing into giant cloud systems.
Bottom line
Beyond corporate IT, “Shadow AI” is really a human behavior story. Most workers aren’t secretly using AI because they’re reckless, but the enterprise chatbot might not seem as useful or fast as OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini or Anthropic's Claude, so workers quietly default to the tools that actually help them.
The companies that succeed probably won’t be the ones that ban AI completely, but the ones that create clear AI policies, provide approved AI tools, educate employees about risks and offer safer alternatives. Of course, understanding why employees are turning to AI in the first place is also key. At this point, AI is so much more than software, but quietly becoming an external brain.
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Amanda Caswell is one of today’s leading voices in AI and technology. A celebrated contributor to various news outlets, her sharp insights and relatable storytelling have earned her a loyal readership. Amanda’s work has been recognized with prestigious honors, including outstanding contribution to media.
Known for her ability to bring clarity to even the most complex topics, Amanda seamlessly blends innovation and creativity, inspiring readers to embrace the power of AI and emerging technologies. As a certified prompt engineer, she continues to push the boundaries of how humans and AI can work together.
Beyond her journalism career, Amanda is a long-distance runner and mom of three. She lives in New Jersey.
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