OpenAI has launched a pilot program in Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, and Taiwan to test its latest group conversation feature within ChatGPT. The innovation enables users to create collaborative conversations with friends, family, classmates, or colleagues, blurring the lines between messaging apps and AI-powered chatbots.
In this group setting, ChatGPT acts as a conversational partner, building itineraries, providing suggestions for renovation projects, or recommending restaurants for social outings. It can also assist in document preparation, such as outlining reports based on shared articles and notes.
To initiate a group conversation, users tap the people icon at the top right corner of the screen, creating a new chat without their existing history if they're starting from an existing conversation. Participants can add or share links with one to 20 individuals, who must then create profiles before joining the chat. Crucially, anyone with the link can invite others in, and participants can mute or remove members except for the group creator.
The responses within these group chats are powered by GPT-5.1 Auto, an AI model capable of adapting its response based on the prompt. OpenAI has tailored this feature to mirror human conversation flow, allowing it to know when to remain silent and when to intervene. Users can summon ChatGPT at any time by mentioning its name.
The tech giant emphasizes that the group chat feature will continue to evolve through user feedback before a broader rollout is considered.
In this group setting, ChatGPT acts as a conversational partner, building itineraries, providing suggestions for renovation projects, or recommending restaurants for social outings. It can also assist in document preparation, such as outlining reports based on shared articles and notes.
To initiate a group conversation, users tap the people icon at the top right corner of the screen, creating a new chat without their existing history if they're starting from an existing conversation. Participants can add or share links with one to 20 individuals, who must then create profiles before joining the chat. Crucially, anyone with the link can invite others in, and participants can mute or remove members except for the group creator.
The responses within these group chats are powered by GPT-5.1 Auto, an AI model capable of adapting its response based on the prompt. OpenAI has tailored this feature to mirror human conversation flow, allowing it to know when to remain silent and when to intervene. Users can summon ChatGPT at any time by mentioning its name.
The tech giant emphasizes that the group chat feature will continue to evolve through user feedback before a broader rollout is considered.