What Web Browsing Data Tells Us About How AI Appears Online
One month of web browsing data shows most respondents visited a search page with an AI-generated summary, but visits to in-depth content about AI were much rarer.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
One month of web browsing data shows most respondents visited a search page with an AI-generated summary, but visits to in-depth content about AI were much rarer.
Far more of the site’s news influencers explicitly identify with the political right than left, and two-thirds are men.
One-in-five U.S. adults say they find AI summaries in search results extremely or very useful, 52% say they’re somewhat useful, and 28% say they’re not too or not at all useful.
YouTube news influencers are more likely to explicitly identify with the political right than the left. Few have links to the news industry.
About half say it’s acceptable for journalists to advocate for communities they cover; fewer favor them expressing personal views.
News influencers on TikTok stand out from other sites for having a smaller gender gap and being more balanced in political leanings.
The data in this report is drawn from a national cross-sectional survey conducted for Pew Research Center by Westat. The sampling design of the survey was an address-based sampling (ABS) approach, supplemented by list samples, to reach a nationally representative group of respondents. The survey was fielded July 5, 2022, through Jan. 27, 2023. Self-administered […]
Congress has passed all its required appropriations measures on time only four times in nearly five decades.
A majority of U.S. adults say they’re bothered a lot by the feeling that some corporations (61%) and some wealthy people (60%) don’t pay their fair share.
Almost two-thirds of news influencers are men. And except on TikTok, more influencers explicitly identify with the political right than the left.
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