Anthropic Survey of 80,508 People Shows What Users Want From AI and What They Fear
3-minute read.
In today's newsletter:
- X is testing a private dislike button
- Meta is paying creators up to $3,000 a month
- China is pushing OpenClaw AI to millions
- Anthropic survey of 80,508 people shows what users want from AI and what they fear
- One more thing: This iPhone hack can expose your company’s data from one website visit, even if you did nothing wrong
X Is Testing a Private Dislike Button
X is testing a dislike button again, but only for some users and mainly on replies. It does not show publicly and there is no dislike count.
When someone taps it, they may be asked why, like spam or misleading content, and that feedback stays private.
X is using this to improve its algorithm, not to shame posts. Reports say it will push down spam and low quality replies and limit how much spam accounts get seen or earn.
Twitter tested this before, and now X is bringing it back in a more controlled way with no full rollout date yet.
Meta Is Paying Creators Up to $3,000 a Month
Meta is paying creators to post on Facebook through its Creator Fast Track program.
Creators with 100,000 followers can earn about $1,000 a month, and those with over 1 million followers can earn up to $3,000 a month for about three months.
In return, Meta boosts their reach and gives access to monetization tools, focusing on short videos like Reels.
Reports say Meta paid creators nearly $3 billion in 2025 as it tries to bring activity back to Facebook.
China Is Pushing OpenClaw AI to Millions
China is pushing AI adoption through a tool called OpenClaw, promoted by companies like Baidu and Tencent through public events and training.
The tool helps with everyday tasks like messaging, scheduling, shopping, and basic work, and is designed for everyone, including older adults.
This is part of China’s plan to have AI widely used by 2030.
Instead of just building AI, the focus is on getting millions of people to use it in daily life through large-scale public rollout.
Anthropic Survey of 80,508 People Shows What Users Want From AI and What They Fear
Anthropic surveyed 80,508 people around the world to understand what they want from AI.
Most people said they want AI to help them do their jobs better, learn faster, and improve their daily lives. Many see AI as a tool for professional growth, creativity, and getting more done.
At the same time, people have clear concerns. They worry AI can give wrong answers, replace jobs, and make people too dependent on it.
The study shows people see AI as both helpful and risky, a tool that can improve life but also create new problems.
One More Thing
This iPhone Hack Can Expose Your Company’s Data From One Website Visit:
Even If You Did Nothing Wrong.
Read.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is for informational purposes only. Details may change or come from third-party sources; always do your own research and consult a qualified professional before making decisions.