Questions & Answers

Below are some of the most common and important questions people may ask about our services.

1. What happens if someone talks about illegal, harmful, political, or antisocial behaviour?

Our system is designed to be a safe and supportive space. It is not intended to encourage, support, or assist harmful, illegal, dangerous, or antisocial actions.

If someone raises these kinds of issues, the conversation is guided away from harmful behaviour and towards safer, more responsible thinking.

Where appropriate, the system may:

  • encourage the person to pause and reflect
  • highlight the possible consequences of harmful actions
  • promote safer alternatives and better choices
  • suggest seeking appropriate real-world support
We aim to guide people toward safer and more responsible next steps, not harmful ones.
2. What if a parent is worried about their child carrying a knife, vaping, taking drugs, being bullied, or being groomed?

Situations like these can be frightening for parents, and one of the most helpful things is often having somewhere to begin calmly.

Our system may help as a first step by offering:

  • calm practical guidance
  • suggestions for how to start the conversation with their child
  • early warning signs to look out for
  • ideas for sensible next steps

However, we are very clear that we do not replace professional advice or emergency support.

Where serious concerns exist, parents should contact the appropriate professional body or service, such as:

  • the child’s school or safeguarding lead
  • their GP or NHS services
  • NSPCC or Childline guidance
  • the police if there is immediate danger or risk
Our role is to help parents take an informed first step and encourage them to seek proper support where needed.
3. What if someone is in crisis but does not fully realise how much danger they may be in?

This is an important question. If someone is distressed, confused, overwhelmed, or not thinking clearly, they may not always understand how serious their situation is.

Our system is designed to respond carefully to signs of distress or possible danger in what a person is saying.

In these situations, the tone of the guidance may become more supportive and protective. It may:

  • gently indicate that their situation may be serious
  • encourage them to pause and seek help
  • suggest contacting someone they trust
  • recommend professional or emergency support where appropriate

We do not claim to replace trained crisis services, but we do aim to help people recognise when they may need urgent support.

If someone appears to be in immediate danger, they should contact emergency services, the NHS, Samaritans, or another appropriate professional support service as soon as possible.
4. Are you replacing therapists, counsellors, doctors, or other professionals?

No. Our service is not a replacement for therapists, counsellors, doctors, safeguarding professionals, emergency services, or any other qualified expert support.

What we provide is early guidance, structured support, and a starting point for people who may feel unsure, embarrassed, isolated, or uncertain about what to do next.

We see our role as support before, between, or alongside professional help — not instead of it.

5. Is it safe for vulnerable people to use?

Safety is very important to us. Our system is designed to communicate in a calm, supportive, and responsible way.

We aim to:

  • avoid harmful or extreme guidance
  • encourage sensible next steps
  • promote safer decision-making
  • signpost people to real-world help where needed

We believe supportive early guidance can help people feel less alone and more able to seek the right help.

6. What makes this different from searching Google?

Search engines provide a large amount of information, but that information can be overwhelming, confusing, and impersonal.

Our aim is to offer something more structured and relevant by helping people:

  • think more clearly about their situation
  • understand possible next steps
  • receive more focused guidance instead of endless links

We are not simply offering information. We are trying to help people make sense of what to do next.

7. Are you qualified to offer this kind of support?

We are careful about how we describe our service. We do not claim to diagnose, treat, or provide regulated therapy or medical services.

Our service is designed to provide:

  • general guidance
  • supportive conversation
  • structured thinking
  • practical suggestions for next steps

Where professional advice is needed, we encourage people to seek help from the appropriate qualified organisations or services.

8. What about misinformation or wrong advice?

No system is perfect, whether it is human-led or technology-led. That is why we take a careful and responsible approach.

We aim to reduce risk by:

  • avoiding extreme or specialist claims
  • keeping guidance practical and sensible
  • encouraging people to sense-check important decisions
  • recommending professional support where needed

Our goal is to help people think more clearly and move toward safer, more positive next steps.

9. Are you exploiting vulnerable people for money?

No. Our aim is to make support more accessible, affordable, and available to people who may otherwise have nowhere to begin.

We are trying to provide practical value and early support in a way that is affordable and responsible.

The purpose is to help people take positive steps forward, not to take advantage of vulnerability.

10. What if someone is in immediate danger or needs urgent help?

If someone is in immediate danger or believes they may act in a way that could harm themselves or others, they should contact the appropriate emergency or crisis support services straight away.

In the UK this may include:

  • calling 999 in an emergency
  • contacting the NHS or local urgent mental health support service
  • calling Samaritans for immediate emotional support
Our platform is intended to support people before a crisis develops, or alongside proper support, but it is not a substitute for emergency or crisis intervention.
11. What about children using the service without a parent or responsible adult being involved?

We believe parental or responsible adult involvement is important, especially where a child may be dealing with sensitive issues.

Our service is intended as a supportive resource, but not as a replacement for family support, safeguarding processes, school support, or professional care.

Where a child may be at risk, trusted adults and professional safeguarding organisations should always be involved.

12. Is this just artificial intelligence pretending to care?

No technology can replace genuine human care, understanding, or professional support.

What we are trying to do is provide a helpful starting point for people who may feel alone, unsure, or unable to open up straight away.

If our service helps someone feel calmer, think more clearly, or realise they need real-world support, then it has served a useful purpose.

13. Why did you create this service?

We created this service because too many people struggle quietly, often not knowing where to turn or what to do next.

Long waiting times, embarrassment, fear of being judged, or simply feeling overwhelmed can stop people from taking the first step.

Our aim is to offer people a private, supportive starting point that may help them feel less stuck and more able to move forward.

If we can help someone recognise that they need support, and encourage them to take a positive next step, then that can make a real difference.