“New technologies don’t emerge in a vacuum,” wrote Sarah Friar, Chief Financial Officer of OpenAI in “The Democratizing of Intelligence,” one of 21 essays in The Digitalist Papers Volume 2, — a roadmap of the relentlessly advancing capabilities of the AI revolution. “In the beginning, they often reflect and amplify the inequalities of their time — access is shaped by where you live, what you earn, and the systems around you. Then, broader diffusion takes hold. That is what we have seen in the past, with previous waves of technological progress. And that is what we see with AI today.”
Friar referenced a recent study that tracked the use of ChatGPT over the three years since its launch in November, 2022. As has generally been the case with new technologies, the majority of early adopters were young, highly educated males in living in high-income countries. But by mid-2025, the story had started to change. ChatGPT had already been adopted by 800 million active users, which is roughly 10% of the world’s adult population. The gender gap has narrowed dramatically, and the growth rate is higher in lower-income countries. While there is steady growth in work-related usage, — which is more common for educated users in higher paid professional occupations, the growth has been even faster in non-work related activities, which grew from 53% to more than 70% of all usage.
“The data suggest that AI is being democratized faster than previous technologies, with early disparities in geography and gender closing at a remarkable pace,” wrote Friar. Her essay summarized the key changes in the use of ChatGPT over the past three years:
- Growth in low- and middle-income countries outpaced rich countries by more than four to one over the past year.
- As of mid-2025, internet-enabled penetration in countries at the 25th percentile of GDP per capita matched adoption in high-income economies.
- The gender gap closed: users with typically feminine first names slightly outnumbered those with typically masculine names.
- While all activity grew, non-work usage grew faster than work-related ones, climbing from 45% of traffic in July 2024 to more than 60% by mid-2025.
- Nearly 80% of conversations involve practical guidance, information seeking, or writing, indicating that people are mostly trying to get something done.
- Education stands out —10% of all messages, and nearly 40% of practical-guidance queries, are tied to tutoring or teaching.
- Among work tasks, writing leads the way, with editing and improving existing text outpacing new content creation by two to one, demonstrating that people are using ChatGPT as a tool to augment their work, not do it for them.
So, will AI democratize intelligence or will it lead to a new kind of AI divide? (more…)
