This newsletter is a video about how I use Google NotebookLM to research and understand prostate cancer. I recommend it because it is free, and NotebookLM does not use your personal data, including your source uploads, queries, and the responses from the model for training.
However, just because your data isn't being used for training doesn't automatically mean it's confidential. In the regular version of NotebookLM, it's possible for others to see your information in some situations.
Avoid giving feedback.
If you click the thumbs up or thumbs down on a response, you are choosing to provide feedback.
Google's privacy policy says human reviewers may look at your questions, uploads, and the AI's responses if you provide feedback.
If you want to prevent this, don't click the feedback buttons
It's crucial to read the privacy policy to understand exactly how your data is handled and decide if you are comfortable with it.
With NotebookLM, you can have up to 100 notebooks, each containing up to 50 sources. Each of those sources can be up to 500,000 words long. All users start with up to fifty chat queries and three audio (podcast) generations per day. Let me know in the comments if you’d like more videos like this.
Correction: I called the National Cancer Comprehensive Cancer Network in this video the National Cancer Center Network. Whoops:-))
Until the next one, stay healthy.
Much love,
Keith
Excellent info...Appreciate you for your positive methodology and your sharing insights and experiences, Dr H....
Dr. Holden, would NotebookLM be useful in analyzing test data such as PSA and MRI results in terms of recommending whether to for instance continue active surveillance, retest for PSA and/or MRI or to seek a biopsy? Thanks.....Tom