試す - 無料

Thinking Inside the Bot

The Morning Standard

|

September 21, 2025

ChatGPT is everywhere. But is it a blessing or a curse?

- By TANISHA SAXENA

What do Arjun Mehta, caught in a relationship dilemma, and Priya Sharma, a student at Delhi University, have in common?

Both have the “bot”. They turned to the same source for help—Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer, or ChatGPT. For Arjun, who admits he was “spiralling like a Shakespearean hero” over a girl he was dating, ChatGPT didn’t offer a cheesy pickup line or a cliché like “just move on.” Instead, it served up a disarming question: “What’s your goal—connection, or reassurance?” That pause gave him perspective. On the other hand, Priya went down the slippery slope. During the mid-semester exams, she found herself overwhelmed. Desperate and short on time, she asked ChatGPT to write a 1,500-word essay for her assignment. A week later, her professor called her in. “This doesn’t sound like you,” he said. After further questioning and a review by the academic committee, she was suspended for the semester, her scholarship was withdrawn, and her academic record flagged.

There was a time when advice lived in very human places. You cried on a friend’s shoulder, argued with a parent, scribbled down your worries for a therapist, or nervously dialed your doctor. These days, people are skipping all that and typing their most personal questions into a ChatGPT chat box. A bot becomes confidant, coach, sounding board, and sometimes even relationship referee.

A new paper from OpenAI, Harvard, and Duke reveals that while ChatGPT now has 700 million weekly users sending 2.5 billion messages daily, its usage has shifted from primarily work-related tasks to more personal and informational queries. Also, by mid-2025, ChatGPT users shifted from being predominantly male to majority female, with nearly half of messages coming from users aged 18-25. Usage is growing four times faster in low-income countries than in high-income ones.

The Morning Standard からのその他のストーリー

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

For the Sake of Truth

Filmmaker Madhur Bhandarkar talks about his upcoming film, The Wives, and his \"no camp\" policy in Bollywood

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

The Heartbreak Manifesto

It is ironic that the latest book, Heartbreak Unfiltered, by India's first Mills & Boon author, Milan Vohra, is about love... followed by loss and heartbreak.

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

The Quiet Power of Surrender

Let the new year bring devotion, humility, and understanding.

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

More than a Vendetta

Panji Tengorak is not a straightforward revenge drama. While it retains the simmers beneath the surface.

time to read

1 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Right State of Mind for Manifestation

January is that time of the year, when many insist on cloaking everything with a patina of putrid positivity.

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

The Little, Nasty Bump on Your Feet

Do you ever look down at your feet and think \"What is that weird bump and what is it doing there?\"

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

The Making of a Young Carnatic Mind

At just 18, vocalist Rahul Vellal is singing with the poise of a veteran- and thinking about music with the curiosity of an engineer

time to read

3 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

A Busy Person's Guide for Personal Discipline

French novelist Gustave Flaubert once said, \"Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.\"

time to read

2 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

KARNATAKA'S STANDALONE HATE SPEECH BILL FACES HEADWINDS

KARNATAKA'S joint legislature in December passed the country's first standalone hate speech legislation that is decidedly more stringent than provisions of an omnibus Central law.

time to read

6 mins

January 11, 2026

The Morning Standard

The Morning Standard

A Sobering Effect

How a zero-proof moment is reshaping youth drinking, rituals and brands

time to read

9 mins

January 11, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size