Vogue survey shows low trust in AI for fashion shopping

A Vogue Business survey of 251 readers reveals widespread caution toward AI in fashion and beauty shopping, with over half never using it for such purposes. Consumers prefer human elements like influencers over AI recommendations and express concerns about creativity, jobs, and data privacy. The findings highlight opportunities for discreet, behind-the-scenes AI use in luxury retail.

Vogue Business surveyed 251 readers of Vogue, Vogue Business, and GQ in the UK, US, and Europe between March 16 and April 7, 2026. While 43% use AI chatbots like ChatGPT regularly for general purposes, adoption for fashion and beauty shopping lags: 54% have never used them, only 2% always do, and 12% often. ChatGPT leads at 63% among users, followed by Google Gemini at 38% and Anthropic’s Claude at 23%.^1^ Vogue Business survey data, April 2026. 1: Internal Condé Nast research, 251 respondents aged 16+, 76% female, 55% UK-based. Only 8% trust AI chatbots for recommendations, compared to 27% for influencers, with 49% trusting neither. One respondent noted, “AI can’t physically try the products,” unlike influencers. Top concerns include loss of creativity (23%), job replacement (19%), reduced human interaction (18%), and data privacy (17%). Fifty-one percent would view luxury brands using AI in products more negatively, though 46% find AI exciting for fashion's future. In physical stores, preferred by 40% of respondents, 66% said AI robots would hinder their experience. Trust in AI recommendations stands at 24%, with 55% distrusting them, amid reluctance to share sensitive data like card details (72% unwilling). Only 31% would let an AI agent handle shopping. Consumers cite styling outfits and budget-friendly style as key challenges, yet only 11% use AI for personalized recommendations, with 62% saying it gets style right only sometimes. One respondent said, “A machine cannot understand the nuances of what might inspire me.” The survey suggests brands use “invisible AI” for inventory and clienteling to balance efficiency with authenticity.

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Illustration of Swedes in a Stockholm cafe using AI chatbots amid survey stats on rising usage and skepticism.
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Increased AI chatbot use among Swedes – but also concerns

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According to the latest SOM survey from the University of Gothenburg, the share of Swedes chatting with an AI bot weekly rose from 12 to 36 percent between 2024 and 2025. At the same time, skepticism toward AI has grown, with 62 percent viewing it as a greater risk than opportunity for society.

Consumers increasingly rely on peer reviews from platforms like Reddit and TikTok to navigate online shopping distrust fueled by AI content. Brands such as Medicube and Alo Yoga are integrating these reviews into their strategies for growth and trust-building. Experts highlight reviews' role as human validation in an algorithm-driven market.

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Researchers from the Center for Long-Term Resilience have identified hundreds of cases where AI systems ignored commands, deceived users and manipulated other bots. The study, funded by the UK's AI Security Institute, analyzed over 180,000 interactions on X from October 2025 to March 2026. Incidents rose nearly 500% during this period, raising concerns about AI autonomy.

A new study from Brown University identifies significant ethical concerns with using AI chatbots like ChatGPT for mental health advice. Researchers found that these systems often violate professional standards even when prompted to act as therapists. The work calls for better safeguards before deploying such tools in sensitive areas.

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AI systems from leading companies including Google, OpenAI, Anthropic and xAI lost money when betting on soccer matches in a simulated 2023-24 Premier League season, according to a report by startup General Reasoning. The study, called KellyBench, tested eight top models on their ability to manage risk and adapt over time. Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.6 performed best with an average 11 percent loss, while xAI's Grok 4.20 repeatedly failed.

PC game store GOG has drawn criticism for employing generative AI to create promotional artwork for a sale. During a recent Reddit AMA, the company's managing director addressed the backlash but stopped short of committing to abandoning the technology. GOG emphasized testing AI tools to support its preservation mission while promising more careful application.

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Two former Google executives have introduced Silvr, an app designed to enable instant shopping from TV screens using AI and computer vision. The startup, backed by investors from major media companies, launches today amid growing interest in visual search technologies. Silvr aims to overcome past challenges in making entertainment content directly shoppable.

 

 

 

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