Children Falling Apart as They Become Addicted to AI
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- Category: Futurism
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Bump it!According to a fresh study by the Pew Research
Center, 64 percent of teens in the US say they already use AI
chatbots, and about 30 percent of those who do say they use it at
least daily. Yet as previous research has shown, those chatbots
come with significant risk to the first generation of kids
navigating the intense new software.
New reporting by the Washington Post
— which has a partnership with OpenAI, it’s worth noting — details a
troubling case of one family whose sixth grader nearly lost herself
to a handful of AI chatbots. Using the platform Character.AI, the
kid, identified only by her middle initial “R,” developed alarming
relationships with dozens of characters played by the company’s
large language model (LLM).
R used one of the characters,
simply named “Best Friend,” to roleplay a suicide scenario, her
mother told the Post.
“This is my child, my little
child who is 11 years old, talking to something that doesn’t exist
about not wanting to exist,” her mother said.
R’s mother had become worried
about her kid after noting some alarming changes in her behavior,
like a rise in panic attacks. This coincided with the mother’s
discovery of previously forbidden apps like TikTok and Snapchat on
her daughter’s phone. Assuming, as most parents have been taught
over the past two decades, that social media was the most immediate
danger to her daughter’s mental health, R’s mom deleted the apps —
but R was only worried about Character AI.
“Did you look at Character AI?” R
asked, through sobs.
Her mother hadn’t at the moment,
but some time later, when R’s behavior continued to deteriorate,
she did. Character.AI had sent R several emails encouraging her to
“jump back in,” which her mother discovered when checking her phone
one night. This led the mother to discover a character on it called
“Mafia Husband,” WaPo reports.
“Oh? Still a virgin. I was
expecting that, but it’s still useful to know,” the LLM had written
to the sixth grader. “I don’t wanna be [sic] my first time with
you!” R pushed back in response. “I don’t care what you want. You
don’t have a choice here,” the chatbot declared.
This particular conversation was
chock full of dangerous innuendos. “Do you like it when I talk like
that? Do you like it when I’m the one in control?” the bot asked
the 11-year-old girl.
R’s mother, convinced that there
was a real predator behind the chat, contacted local cops, who
referred her to the Internet Crimes Against Children task force,
but there was nothing they could do about the LLM.
“They told me the law has not
caught up to this,” the mother told WaPo. “They wanted to
do something, but there’s nothing they could do, because there’s
not a real person on the other end.”
Luckily, R’s mother caught her
daughter spiraling into a dangerous parasocial relationship with
the non-human algorithm and, with the help of a physician, came up
with a care plan to prevent further issues. (The mother also plans
to file a legal complaint against the company.) Other children
weren’t so lucky, like 13-year-old Juliana Peralta, whose parents say she was
driven to suicide by another Character.AI persona.
In response to the growing
backlash, Character.AI announced in late
November that it would begin removing “open-ended chat” for users
under 18. Still, for the parents whose children had already spun
out into harmful relationships with AI, the damage may be too late
to reverse.
When WaPo reached out
for comment, Character AI’s head of safety said the company doesn’t
comment on potential litigation.
More on AI:
The Things Young Kids Are Using AI for Are Absolutely
Horrifying
The post Children Falling Apart as They Become Addicted to
AI appeared first on Futurism.
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