Growing use of artificial intelligence is outpacing media literacy, a report in Australia has found
Media literacy among adults is not keeping pace with the rapid advancement of generative artificial intelligence (AI), according to research published in Australia on Monday. The trend is leaving internet users increasingly vulnerable to misinformation, the authors of the research said.
The AI industry exploded in 2022 after the launch of chatbot and virtual assistant ChatGPT by US AI research organization OpenAI. The sector has since attracted billions of dollars in investment, with tech giants such as Google and Microsoft offering tools such as image and text generators.
However, users’ confidence in their own digital media abilities remains low, according to the ‘Adult Media Literacy in 2024’ paper by Western Sydney University.
In a sample of 4,442 adult Australians, respondents were asked how confident they were to perform a series of 11 media-related tasks that required critical and technical abilities and/or knowledge. On average, respondents said they could complete just four out of the 11 tasks with confidence.
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The results are “largely unchanged” since 2021, when previous research was conducted, the paper noted.
The ability to identify misinformation online has not changed at all, as per research data. In 2021 and in 2024, only 39% of responders said they were confident they could check if information they found online is true.