(I linked to the Yahoo version of the article because it’s not paywalled. Original WaPo article is here.)
Since its public launch in late 2022, [OpenAI] promoted [ChatGPT] as a “revolutionary” productivity tool transforming the future of work. But, in an analysis of 47,000 ChatGPT conversations, The Washington Post found that users are overwhelmingly turning to the chatbot for advice and companionship, not productivity tasks.



Their conclusions might be due to the fact that people simply don’t share their productivity chats.
The article doesn’t really substantiate thier claim anyways. Data analysis, writing, summarization… even “seeking specific information” all seem like productivity tasks to me.
It seems to use the 10% of chats which are “abstract conversations” as justification.
Anyhow, I wholeheartedly agree that the methodology is CLEARLY flawed: there is no reason to expected shared chats are an appropriate representation of ALL chats.
But, even with the flawed sample, I don’t even think it supports the assertion anyways.
True, but they also say, “It is possible that some people didn’t know their conversations would become publicly preserved online” so it’s likely that many of these chats were not deliberately shared, and therefore should include productivity-related ones as well.
It’s unlikely they knew it would become publicly available but they were still deliberately shared.
That still relies on the assumption that people chose to share their productivity-related chats as often as others.
They were being shared by default at first and had to opt out of sharing when many were archived. Unsure if it was true of these particular ones though.
You always had to click the share button. What they changed is if they show up on Google.