The data presents two starkly different realities. The sheer volume of 'Power Point' (228) dwarfing all else signifies that AI's primary utility in late 2025 is automating corporate drudgery. Conversely, the rise of 'Muke.ai' and 'Removal' keywords (associated with face-swaps/nudity filters) alongside specific prompts like 'MotionMuse' indicates a fragmented creative market split between professional animation and controversial 'deepfake-lite' consumer apps.
The massive search volume for 'power points', 'ppt', and 'diapositivas' suggests that standard generative AI for text is now a solved problem, and users have moved to format generation. This aligns with late-year academic and corporate cycles. Users are not asking 'how to write', they are asking 'how to package'. The prominence of multilingual terms indicates this is a global shift in workforce productivity standards.
While art generation typically leads trends, today we see a spike in reductive AI: tools designed to 'remove' elements, backgrounds, or clothes. The cluster of 'Muke.ai' and 'remove' indicates a surge in interest for face-swapping and image manipulation tools that operate in legal grey areas. This is separate from mainstream creative flow and represents the persistent 'Underground AI' consumer market.
Long-tail searches in Spanish and Kazakh (e.g., 'mapa conceptual', 'science project titles') highlight that students are using AI for structural cognition—organizing ideas rather than just generating essays. This validates the growth of specialized EdTech tools that go beyond simple chat interfaces to offer diagramming and project planning.
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