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Is the Gas App Safe? Here鈥檚 What You Need to Know

By Alyson Klein 鈥 January 18, 2023 2 min read
Photograph of a group of young people holding their mobile phones together
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Gas has become one of the most popular apps for high schoolers. Its name stems from the idea of 鈥済assing鈥 someone up, Gen Z-speak for making people feel good about themselves. But is the app really a positive force? What鈥檚 the catch?

What is the Gas app?

Gas is the latest social media app to catch fire with high school students. Earlier this school year, it was the top free social media platform in Apple鈥檚 app store. Its founders include Nikita Bier, who launched a similar app called 鈥渢bh鈥 back in 2017.

On Gas, users select their school and grade from a pre-populated list based on their location to begin building their contacts. Then teens are presented with polls and asked to choose which of four listed contacts has the best photos, who always passes the vibe check, who is the most empathetic, who is always flirting, or who they鈥檇 want to hold hands with during a horror movie.

What are the dangers of the Gas app?

Gas eschews some of the features that have made other apps鈥攍ike Snapchat or Instagram鈥攔isky for teens. Strangers can鈥檛 contact kids. Users can only say nice things to each other, by participating in polls with an ostensibly positive spin, instead of writing their own, possibly hurtful messages.

Still, bullying is possible, even if less overt. For one thing, students may find they never rise to the top of any of the polls. (The app does try to correct for this, by surfacing users鈥 names more often if they haven鈥檛 received any recent compliments.) And second, some of the supposedly positive polls could be used facetiously. For instance, someone who objectively realizes that they are not the best-looking kid in school could be mockingly selected as 鈥渕ost beautiful.鈥

Earlier this year, . That鈥檚 not true, even though some police departments, including the one in Piedmont, Okla., put out warnings about the app.

Is the Gas app anonymous?

For the most part, the answer is yes. Users that stick with the free version鈥攚hich is the vast majority鈥攃an鈥檛 see who is voting for them in polls. But for a fee of $6.99 a week, users can upgrade to a premium version that offers extras, including hints about who is voting for them in polls, such as the first letter of a name.

Is the Gas app free?

Most users鈥攎ore than 95 percent, according to Bier鈥攐pt for the free version. But there is a premium version that costs $6.99 a week, which can add up to a lot of money over time for a high school kid.

That has experts questioning whether Gas is seeking to profit from teenage anxieties, by convincing them that the premium version will give them a better sense of what their peers think of them.

鈥淚t feels a little exploitative to me,鈥 said Spencer Greenhalgh, an assistant professor at the University of Kentucky鈥檚 school of information sciences. 鈥淭hey know teenagers are insecure and they want to know what their friends think about them.鈥

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