Ads in AI chatbots raise privacy concerns as companies seek new revenue

Ads in AI chatbots raise privacy concerns as companies seek new revenue

Ads in AI chatbots raise privacy concerns as companies seek new revenue

https://www.turkiyetoday.com/business/ads-in-ai-chatbots-raise-privacy-concerns-as-companies-seek-new-revenue-3214565

Publish Date: 2026-02-15 18:32:00

Source Domain: www.turkiyetoday.com

The introduction of advertisements and sponsored content in AI chatbots has raised privacy concerns among users, as technology companies and brands scramble to stay relevant in a rapidly evolving online environment.

ChatGPT developer OpenAI has begun showing ads in chatbot conversations for free and low-cost users as it seeks to balance hundreds of billions of dollars in spending commitments with new revenue sources.

The move quickly drew criticism from rival Anthropic, which has built its reputation around safety and data security.

Anthropic aired an advertisement during last week’s Super Bowl depicting a man seeking advice from a conversational AI, which then inserts advertising copy for a dating website into an otherwise relevant response.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman responded by calling the clip “clearly dishonest.”

Beyond OpenAI, Microsoft has been running contextual ads and sponsored content in its Copilot AI assistant since 2023.

AI search engine Perplexity has been testing ads in the United States since 2024, while Google has also been testing ads in the AI-generated “overviews” offered by its search engine since last year.

Data privacy and user trust

Google has repeatedly denied plans to run ads in its Gemini chatbot. Demis Hassabis, head of Google’s DeepMind AI unit, has said ads “have to be handled very carefully.”

“The most important thing,” in AI, he said, is “trust in security and privacy, because you want to share potentially your life with that assistant.”

OpenAI has sought to reassure users that ChatGPT’s responses will not be altered by advertising, saying ads are displayed alongside conversations rather than integrated into them. The company has also pledged not to sell user data to advertisers.

AI companies are “concerned that selling ads will scare away users,” said Nate Elliott, an analyst with US data firm eMarketer.

But “when it’s free, you’re the product. It’s a risk we’re all more or…

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