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How Ordinary People Turned A.I. Into A Therapist, Life Coach And Quiet Revolt
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) If you only followed tech headlines, you might think artificial intelligence in 2025 is mostly about turbo-charged programmers, sci-fi robots and corporate cost cutting. A large global study of the 100 most common real-world uses tells a very different story.
The most frequent way people use generative AI today is not to write code or advertising copy, but to talk about their lives, organise their days and search for meaning.
Researchers sifted through thousands of posts on Reddit, Quora and other forums where people describe, in their own words, how they use tools like ChatGPT.
They ranked each use case by how useful it felt and how many people seemed to be doing it. At the top of the list, three entries stand out: therapy and companionship, organising my life, and finding purpose.
The quotes behind those categories are striking. A user in South Africa explains that in their region there is roughly one psychologist for every 100,000 people, and even fewer psychiatrists.
For them, an always-on chatbot is simply the only“person” available at 3 a.m. to listen to their grief or fear. Others use AI to talk through a breakup, a job loss, or the death of a parent when family networks are thin and professional help is out of reach.
The second big cluster is life administration. People ask models to design cleaning timetables before guests arrive, break down New Year resolutions into simple daily habits, or build a study plan around evening shifts.
Generative AI reshapes work and learning in emerging economies
In companies, tools like Microsoft 's Copilot are being trained on emails, documents and meeting notes to clear away bureaucracy and give workers more time to think and create.
Learning and work still matter. Students paste in confusing paragraphs from online courses and get explanations in plain language. Developers generate template code and tests, then check and adapt it.
Creatives brainstorm product names, travel itineraries or even wardrobe choices with an endlessly patient partner that never gets tired or embarrassed.
The story behind the story is about trust and control. Millions are choosing tools that answer only to them, rather than waiting for overloaded public systems or distant institutions.
At the same time, forum debates show growing frustration with moralising or politically filtered AI systems, and concern about who owns the data from deeply personal chats.
For expats and foreigners watching Brazil and other emerging economies, this shift is more than a tech fad. In places where public services are stretched and cultural debates are heated, generative AI is quietly becoming part of the emotional and practical infrastructure of everyday life.
The people who benefit most will be those who learn to use it deliberately, ask hard questions of it and keep the final decisions in their own hands.
The most frequent way people use generative AI today is not to write code or advertising copy, but to talk about their lives, organise their days and search for meaning.
Researchers sifted through thousands of posts on Reddit, Quora and other forums where people describe, in their own words, how they use tools like ChatGPT.
They ranked each use case by how useful it felt and how many people seemed to be doing it. At the top of the list, three entries stand out: therapy and companionship, organising my life, and finding purpose.
The quotes behind those categories are striking. A user in South Africa explains that in their region there is roughly one psychologist for every 100,000 people, and even fewer psychiatrists.
For them, an always-on chatbot is simply the only“person” available at 3 a.m. to listen to their grief or fear. Others use AI to talk through a breakup, a job loss, or the death of a parent when family networks are thin and professional help is out of reach.
The second big cluster is life administration. People ask models to design cleaning timetables before guests arrive, break down New Year resolutions into simple daily habits, or build a study plan around evening shifts.
Generative AI reshapes work and learning in emerging economies
In companies, tools like Microsoft 's Copilot are being trained on emails, documents and meeting notes to clear away bureaucracy and give workers more time to think and create.
Learning and work still matter. Students paste in confusing paragraphs from online courses and get explanations in plain language. Developers generate template code and tests, then check and adapt it.
Creatives brainstorm product names, travel itineraries or even wardrobe choices with an endlessly patient partner that never gets tired or embarrassed.
The story behind the story is about trust and control. Millions are choosing tools that answer only to them, rather than waiting for overloaded public systems or distant institutions.
At the same time, forum debates show growing frustration with moralising or politically filtered AI systems, and concern about who owns the data from deeply personal chats.
For expats and foreigners watching Brazil and other emerging economies, this shift is more than a tech fad. In places where public services are stretched and cultural debates are heated, generative AI is quietly becoming part of the emotional and practical infrastructure of everyday life.
The people who benefit most will be those who learn to use it deliberately, ask hard questions of it and keep the final decisions in their own hands.
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