
Many AI toys claim to use chatbots meant for adults and teens
NBC News
Most major tech companies have age restrictions on their powerful chatbots, but that hasn’t stopped some toy companies from claiming to use OpenAI and Google to power their products
Most major tech companies have age restrictions on their powerful chatbots, but that hasn’t stopped some toy companies from claiming to use OpenAI and Google to power their products.
A report released Tuesday by a consumer watchdog found that more than two dozen toys advertised online were marketed as being powered by leading AI models, despite restrictions meant to stop children from using them.
The report from the U.S. Public Interest Research Group Education Fund (PIRG) said the toy companies appeared to have found a gap in AI companies’ policies regarding age restrictions. While young people are forbidden to use such models and their chatbots, developers — people and companies building on the AI models — often don’t face similar restrictions.
PIRG said it was able to sign up for developer access for AI models from Google, OpenAI and xAI and faced “no substantive vetting” regarding whether it would target its services to children. Anthropic asked PIRG whether it planned to build a product for minors.
On Google’s, Anthropic’s and OpenAI’s developer platforms, PIRG was able to build a system designed to act like an AI-powered teddy bear for children.

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