ChatGPT Adds Group Chats so You and Your Friends Can Talk to the AI Together
The pilot enables up to 20 people to collaborate with GPT-5.1 in shared chats, reducing misunderstandings and improving group planning efficiency, says OpenAI.
- On Thursday, OpenAI announced tests of a group-chat pilot that lets up to 20 participants, including ChatGPT, collaborate in one thread, live in Japan, New Zealand, South Korea and Taiwan.
- To improve group coordination, OpenAI says the Shared Projects feature brings people and ChatGPT into the same space to reduce repetition and supports Free, Plus, Pro users on web, iOS, and Android.
- Users start chats by tapping the people icon, set up a profile with name, username and photo, and find group chats in a sidebar section; GPT-5.1 Auto moderates with emojis and rate limits on AI replies using credits.
- OpenAI says privacy is preserved by keeping private ChatGPT memories separate, users under 18 have sensitive content removed, parental controls can disable group chats, and the pilot evaluation process will guide expansion.
- For teams and creators, group chats enable joint drafts and shared transcripts, supporting outlines, research, and datasets, while OpenAI's broader rollout plans depend on positive feedback.
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28 Articles
ChatGPT Experiments With Real Group Conversations in a Limited Rollout
OpenAI has started testing group chats inside ChatGPT, and the pilot hints at a shift in how people might use the tool when more than one person enters the same thread. The feature sits in a small rollout that touches Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, and Taiwan. It works on the web and on mobile, and it accepts anyone with a logged in account on Free, Go, Plus, or Pro plans. The idea is simple. Put a handful of people in one conversation, let Ch…
The new feature allows multiple users to interact with AI simultaneously in a single chat
Psychoanalyst Michaël Stora, an expert in the digital world, warns about the dangers of these artificial intelligences that are increasingly entering the intimacy of young people.
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