Instagram has grown in popularity since its launch 10 years ago this month. The photo and video sharing platform is often used to post mundane images of everyday life, but in recent years it has also become a marketplace for online influencers, political and election news and disinformation campaigns. The site is especially popular among young adults and teens, though it has been approached tentatively by some Americans as a venue for news and political information-sharing.

Over the years, Pew Research Center has studied how American adults—as well as teens and children—engage with the platform. Here are a few key takeaways from Pew’s research.

• Roughly four-in-ten Americans (37 percent) say they have ever used Instagram online or on their cellphone, according to a survey conducted in January and February of 2019. The share of U.S. adults who say they have ever used the site has grown from 9 percent in 2012, when the Center first began asking about the platform.

• A majority of adult Instagram users in the U.S. say they use the site daily. About six-in-ten U.S. adults who use Instagram (63 percent) say they do so every day, while smaller shares say they use the platform weekly (21 percent) or less often (16 percent).

• Roughly seven-in-ten U.S. teens (72 percent) say they use the site. Surpassed only by YouTube, Instagram ranks as the second most popular platform among Americans in this age group, according to a survey conducted in March and April of 2018.

• Instagram is not a top social media site for getting news. Around one-in-seven U.S. adults (14 percent) say they ever get news on the platform, according to a 2019 survey. That’s similar to the share who ever get news on Twitter (17 percent), but far smaller than the shares who ever get news on Facebook (52 percent) or YouTube (28 percent).

Click here to read the full story from Pew Research Center.