Share this @internewscast.com
The unexpected discovery was that the majority of ChatGPT conversations are not related to work. By June 2025, 73 percent of messages through ChatGPT were for non-work purposes, a noticeable rise from 53 percent the previous year, according to the 62-page report.
Younger people remain the core users of ChatGPT, the researchers said, accounting for 46% of the messages in OpenAI’s dataset.
Discussions are primarily focused on seeking advice and gathering information rather than performing tasks. Roughly half of the messages involve requests for advice or information, whereas about a third are task-related queries.
People predominantly utilize ChatGPT for writing, receiving practical advice, or finding information. Writing is the most common use in work-related chats, constituting 40 percent, but it falls to third place for non-work conversations.
The gender disparity has reduced. Although men formerly had a majority, now users with typically feminine first names slightly triumph. As of the report, 52 percent of users have traditionally feminine first names, an increase from 37 percent in January 2024.
There are distinctions in ChatGPT usage between genders. Users with feminine names tend to use the platform more for writing and practical advice, whereas those with masculine names are inclined to use it for sourcing information, technical assistance, or multimedia purposes.