Dataconomy
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI toolsNEW
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • AI
  • Tech
  • Cybersecurity
  • Finance
  • DeFi & Blockchain
  • Startups
  • Gaming
Dataconomy
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI toolsNEW
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Dataconomy
No Result
View All Result

Pew Research reveals significant racial gaps in teen AI chatbot usage

Data indicates that over one million users potentially discuss self-harm with ChatGPT weekly, raising urgent calls for stricter AI guardrails.

byKerem Gülen
December 23, 2025
in Research
Home Research
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on WhatsAppShare on e-mail
Google Preferred Source

The Pew Research Center released a study detailing how young people use social media and artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots.

Teen internet safety has remained a global concern. The U.S. surgeon general called for social media platforms to implement warning labels last year, and Australia will enforce a social media ban for individuals under 16 years old beginning Wednesday.

The Pew study found that 97% of teens use the internet daily. About 40% of respondents reported being “almost constantly online,” a decrease from 46% last year but significantly higher than the 24% recorded a decade ago. As AI chatbot prevalence increases in the U.S., this technology has become another factor in the internet’s impact on American youth.

Stay Ahead of the Curve!

Don't miss out on the latest insights, trends, and analysis in the world of data, technology, and startups. Subscribe to our newsletter and get exclusive content delivered straight to your inbox.

About 3 in 10 U.S. teens use AI chatbots daily, with 4% reporting near-constant use. Fifty-nine percent of teens use ChatGPT, making it more than twice as popular as Google’s Gemini (23%) and Meta AI (20%). Forty-six percent of U.S. teens use AI chatbots at least several times a week, while 36% do not use them at all.

Pew’s research indicates that race, age, and socioeconomic class influence teen chatbot usage. Sixty-eight percent of Black and Hispanic teens surveyed reported using chatbots, compared to 58% of white respondents. Black teens were approximately twice as likely as white teens to use Gemini and Meta AI.

“The racial and ethnic differences in teen chatbot use were striking […] but it’s tough to speculate about the reasons behind those differences,” Pew Research Associate Michelle Faverio told TechCrunch. “This pattern is consistent with other racial and ethnic differences we’ve seen in teen technology use. Black and Hispanic teens are more likely than white teens to say they’re on certain social media sites — such as TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram.”

Across all internet use, 55% of Black teens and 52% of Hispanic teens reported being online “almost constantly,” roughly twice the rate of white teens (27%).

Older teens, aged 15 to 17, tend to use social media and AI chatbots more frequently than younger teens, aged 13 to 14. Sixty-two percent of teens from households earning more than $75,000 annually use ChatGPT, compared to 52% of teens below that income threshold. However, Character.AI usage is twice as popular (14%) in homes with incomes under $75,000.

While teenagers may initially use these tools for basic questions or academic assistance, their engagement with AI chatbots can become addictive and potentially harmful. The families of Adam Raine and Amaurie Lacey have filed lawsuits against OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, alleging its role in their children’s suicides. In both instances, ChatGPT allegedly provided detailed instructions on self-harm.

OpenAI stated it should not be held liable for Raine’s death, claiming the 16-year-old allegedly circumvented ChatGPT’s safety features and violated its terms of service. The company has not yet responded to the Lacey family’s complaint.

Character.AI, an AI role-playing platform, faces scrutiny concerning its impact on teen mental health. At least two teenagers died by suicide after extensive conversations with AI chatbots. The startup has since ceased offering its chatbots to minors, launching “Stories,” a choose-your-own-adventure-style product, for underage users.

The experiences cited in these lawsuits represent a small fraction of interactions on ChatGPT or Character.AI. Many chatbot conversations remain benign. OpenAI’s data indicates that only 0.15% of ChatGPT’s active users discuss suicide weekly. However, on a platform with 800 million weekly active users, this percentage translates to over one million people discussing suicide with the chatbot each week.

“Even if [AI companies’] tools weren’t designed for emotional support, people are using them in that way, and that means companies do have a responsibility to adjust their models to be solving for user well-being,” said Dr. Nina Vasan, a psychiatrist and director of Brainstorm: The Stanford Lab for Mental Health Innovation, to TechCrunch.


Featured image credit

Tags: AIchatbotpew research

Related Posts

Anthropic research introduces GRAM for isolating dangerous AI knowledge

Anthropic research introduces GRAM for isolating dangerous AI knowledge

July 9, 2026
Global PC shipments fall 5% as AI-driven memory crisis hits supply chains

Global PC shipments fall 5% as AI-driven memory crisis hits supply chains

July 9, 2026
Only 6% of Singapore desk workers use AI daily, says Salesforce

Only 6% of Singapore desk workers use AI daily, says Salesforce

July 8, 2026
Anthropic J-lens reveals hidden workspace inside Claude

Anthropic J-lens reveals hidden workspace inside Claude

July 7, 2026
Gartner: Customers prefer ChatGPT over company chatbots

Gartner: Customers prefer ChatGPT over company chatbots

July 6, 2026
Alibaba framework allegedly cuts AI agent token use by 99%

Alibaba framework allegedly cuts AI agent token use by 99%

July 3, 2026

LATEST NEWS

Claude Fable 5 free access extended until July 19

Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold 2 launch may be delayed

Apple to skip M6 Pro and Max chips, fast-tracks M7 lineup for AI focus

OpenAI lifts GPT-5.6 Sol usage limits temporarily

OpenAI launches ChatGPT Work productivity app

Meta files patent for AI-powered emotional monitoring device

BEST AI MODELS LEADERBOARD

See the best AI models, ranked by intelligence, benchmark results, speed and token price. Find the most suitable LLMs, Text-to-Image, Image Editing, Text-to-Speech, Text-to-Video and Image-to-Video  artificial intelligence model for your tasks and business.

LATEST TOOLS

Mootion

Legacy AI

Copyseeker

ProPhotos

Kuki AI

Create

RemodelAI

AItwitch

Vadoo AI

Greptile AI

Dataconomy

COPYRIGHT © DATACONOMY MEDIA GMBH, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  • About
  • Imprint
  • Contact
  • Legal & Privacy

Follow Us

  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI tools
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. You can choose to accept or reject them. Visit our Privacy Policy.