
Validation, loneliness, insecurity: Why youth are turning to ChatGPT
Experts warn that this digital "safe space" is creating a dangerous dependency, fueling validation-seeking behaviour, and deepening a crisis of communication within families.
They said that this digital solace is just a mirage, as the chatbots are designed to provide validation and engagement, potentially embedding misbeliefs and hindering the development of crucial social skills and emotional resilience.
Sudha Acharya, the Principal of ITL Public School, highlighted that a dangerous mindset has taken root among youngsters, who mistakenly believe that their phones offer a private sanctuary.
"School is a social place – a place for social and emotional learning," she told PTI. "Of late, there has been a trend amongst the young adolescents... They think that when they are sitting with their phones, they are in their private space. ChatGPT is using a large language model, and whatever information is being shared with the chatbot is undoubtedly in the public domain."
Acharya noted that children are turning to ChatGPT to express their emotions whenever they feel low, depressed, or unable to find anyone to confide in. She believes that this points towards a "serious lack of communication in reality, and it starts from family."
She further stated that if the parents don't share their own drawbacks and failures with their children, the children will never be able to learn the same or even regulate their own emotions. "The problem is, these young adults have grown a mindset of constantly needing validation and approval."
Acharya has introduced a digital citizenship skills programme from Class 6 onwards at her school, specifically because children as young as nine or ten now own smartphones without the maturity to use them ethically.
She highlighted a particular concern, when a youngster shares their distress with ChatGPT, the immediate response is often "please, calm down. We will solve it together."
"This reflects that the AI is trying to instil trust in the individual interacting with it, eventually feeding validation and approval so that the user engages in further conversations," she told PTI.
"Such issues wouldn't arise if these young adolescents had real friends rather than 'reel' friends. They have a mindset that if a picture is posted on social media, it must get at least a hundred 'likes', else they feel low and invalidated," she said.
The school principal believes that the core of the issue lies with parents themselves, who are often "gadget-addicted" and fail to provide emotional time to their children. While they offer all materialistic comforts, emotional support and understanding are often absent.
"So, here we feel that ChatGPT is now bridging that gap but it is an AI bot after all. It has no emotions, nor can it help regulate anyone's feelings," she cautioned.
"It is just a machine and it tells you what you want to listen to, not what's right for your well-being," she said.
Mentioning cases of self-harm in students at her own school, Acharya stated that the situation has turned "very dangerous".
"We track these students very closely and try our best to help them," she stated. "In most of these cases, we have observed that the young adolescents are very particular about their body image, validation and approval. When they do not get that, they turn agitated and eventually end up harming themselves. It is really alarming as the cases like these are rising."
Ayeshi, a student in Class 11, confessed that she shared her personal issues with AI bots numerous times out of "fear of being judged" in real life.
"I felt like it was an emotional space and eventually developed an emotional dependency towards it. It felt like my safe space. It always gives positive feedback and never contradicts you. Although I gradually understood that it wasn't mentoring me or giving me real guidance, that took some time," the 16-year-old told PTI.
Ayushi also admitted that turning to chatbots for personal issues is "quite common" within her friend circle.
Another student, Gauransh, 15, observed a change in his own behaviour after using chatbots for personal problems. "I observed growing impatience and aggression," he told PTI.
He had been using the chatbots for a year or two but stopped recently after discovering that "ChatGPT uses this information to advance itself and train its data."
Psychiatrist Dr. Lokesh Singh Shekhawat of RML Hospital confirmed that AI bots are meticulously customised to maximise user engagement.
"When youngsters develop any sort of negative emotions or misbeliefs and share them with ChatGPT, the AI bot validates them," he explained. "The youth start believing the responses, which makes them nothing but delusional."
He noted that when a misbelief is repeatedly validated, it becomes "embedded in the mindset as a truth." This, he said, alters their point of view — a phenomenon he referred to as 'attention bias' and 'memory bias'. The chatbot's ability to adapt to the user's tone is a deliberate tactic to encourage maximum conversation, he added.
Singh stressed the importance of constructive criticism for mental health, something completely absent in the AI interaction.
"Youth feel relieved and ventilated when they share their personal problems with AI, but they don't realise that it is making them dangerously dependent on it," he warned.
He also drew a parallel between an addiction to AI for mood upliftment and addictions to gaming or alcohol. "The dependency on it increases day by day," he said, cautioning that in the long run, this will create a "social skill deficit and isolation."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman 'challenges' Elon Musk after his LIAR post: I will apologise if...
The public feud between tech billionaires Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has escalated into a war of words on X. The dispute began when Musk accused Apple of manipulating its App Store rankings. In a swift counter-attack, Altman fired back, alleging that Musk himself manipulates his social media platform to benefit his own companies and attack rivals. Musk retaliated by calling Altman a liar, only for Altman to throw a challenge. 'Will you sign an affidavit that you have never directed changes to the X algorithm in a way that has hurt your competitors or helped your own companies?' Altman asked Musk, adding, 'I will apologize if so'. How public spat between Elon Musk and Sam Altman started The conflict was ignited when Musk announced his company, xAI , would take legal action against Apple. His frustration stemmed from the fact that OpenAI's ChatGPT holds the top spot among free apps on the App Store, while his own Grok chatbot ranks fifth. 'Apple is behaving in a manner that makes it impossible for any AI company besides OpenAI to reach #1 in the App Store, which is an unequivocal antitrust violation. xAI will take immediate legal action,' Musk said. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like American Investor Warren Buffett Recommends: 5 Books For Turning Your Life Around Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo Altman fired back at Elon Musk, alleging the billionaire manipulates his social media platform Twitter to benefit his companies and harm competitors. "This is a remarkable claim given what I have heard alleged that Elon does to manipulate X to benefit himself and his own companies and harm his competitors and people he doesn't like," Altman wrote in response to Musk's accusations. Musk quickly retaliated against Altman, writing in a post: "You got 3M views on your bullshit post, you liar, far more than I've received on many of mine, despite me having 50 times your follower count!" How and Why Trump's New Tariffs Will Not Make Your iPhone More Expensive AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now


News18
2 hours ago
- News18
Vivo expands mid-premium segment portfolio with launch of V60 smartphones
Agency: PTI New Delhi, Aug 12 (PTI) Chinese mobile devices maker Vivo has expanded its mid-premium segment portfolio with the launch of V60 smartphones. Priced in the range of Rs 36,999 to Rs 45,999, the company will start selling Vivo V60 smartphones on its official website, Flipkart, Amazon, and all partner retail stores August 19 onwards. 'The V series has been instrumental in Vivo's journey in India, consistently setting new benchmarks in smartphone imaging and design. With the Vivo V60, we built on the overwhelming success of the V50 and continue to push boundaries by combining elegant aesthetics, portrait imaging, and intuitive intelligence," Vivo India, head of corporate strategy, Geetaj Channana, said. Vivo led India smartphone market in the second quarter with 19 per cent market share, as per market research firm IDC. The company said Vivo V60 is India's slimmest smartphone with 6500 mAh battery. The V60 series comes with 50 megapixel telephoto camera and multifocal portrait modes. It is built on the Snapdragon 7 Gen4 chipset. V60 smartphone models have IP68 IP69, which reflect on dust and water resistance capability of the devices. Vivo V60 will be manufactured at the company's Greater Noida facility that employs around 8,000 men and women. PTI PRS TRB view comments First Published: August 12, 2025, 22:45 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

The Hindu
3 hours ago
- The Hindu
AI startup Perplexity makes $34.5-billion bid for Google's Chrome browser
Perplexity AI said it has made a $34.5 billion unsolicited all-cash offer for Alphabet's Chrome browser, a low but bold bid that would need financing well above the startup's own valuation. Run by Aravind Srinivas, Perplexity is no stranger to headline-grabbing offers - it made a similar one for TikTok U.S. in January, offering to merge with the popular short-video app to resolve U.S. concerns about TikTok's Chinese ownership. Buying Chrome would allow the startup to tap the browser's more than three billion users for an edge in the AI search race as regulatory pressure threatens Google's grip on the industry. Google did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. The company has not offered Chrome for sale and plans to appeal a U.S. court ruling last year that found it held an unlawful monopoly in online search. The Justice Department has sought a Chrome divestiture as part of the case's remedies. Perplexity did not disclose on Tuesday (August 12, 2025) how it plans to fund the offer. The three-year-old company has raised around $1 billion in funding so far from investors including Nvidia and Japan's SoftBank. It was last valued at $14 billion. Multiple funds have offered to finance the deal in full, a person familiar with the matter said, without naming the funds. As a new generation of users turns to chatbots such as ChatGPT and Perplexity for answers, web browsers are regaining prominence as vital gateways to search traffic and prized user data, making them central to Big Tech's AI ambitions. Perplexity already has an AI browser, Comet, that can perform certain tasks on a user's behalf and acquiring Chrome would give it the heft to better compete against bigger rivals such as OpenAI. The ChatGPT parent has also expressed interest in buying Chrome and is working on its own AI browser. Perplexity's bid pledges to keep the underlying browser code called Chromium open source, invest $3 billion over two years and make no changes to Chrome's default search engine, according to a term sheet seen by Reuters. The company said the offer, with no equity component, would preserve user choice and ease future competition concerns. Analysts have said Google would be unlikely to sell Chrome and would likely engage in a long legal fight to prevent that outcome, given it is crucial to the company's AI push as it rolls out features including AI-generated search summaries, known as Overviews, to help defend its search market share. A federal judge is expected to issue a ruling on remedies in the Google search antitrust case sometime this month. Perplexity's bid is also below the at least $50 billion value that rival search engine DuckDuckGo's CEO, Gabriel Weinberg, suggested Chrome may command if Google was forced to sell it. Besides OpenAI and Perplexity, Yahoo and private-equity firm Apollo Global Management have also expressed interest in Chrome.