OpenAI introduces new parental controls in ChatGPT following lawsuit
Parents will be able to reduce exposure to sensitive content
OpenAI has announced the launch of parental control in ChatGPT on both phone and browser on Monday, after a lawsuit filed by the parents of a teenager who attempted suicide after chatboat suggested him a method of self-harm.
The controls let parents and teenagers opt in for stronger safeguards by linking their accounts, where one party sends an invitation and parental controls activate only if the other accepts, the company said.
US regulators are increasingly scrutinising AI companies over the potential negative impacts of chatbots. In August, Reuters had reported how Meta's, opens new tab AI rules allowed flirty conversations with kids.
Under the new measures, parents will be able to reduce exposure to sensitive content, control whether ChatGPT remembers past chats, and decide if conversations can be used to train OpenAI's models, the Microsoft-backed company said on X.
Parents will also be allowed to set quiet hours that block access during certain times and disable voice mode as well as image generation and editing, OpenAI said. However, parents will not have access to a teen's chat transcripts, the company added.
In rare cases where systems and trained reviewers detect signs of a serious safety risk, parents may be notified with only the information needed to support the teen's safety, OpenAI said, adding they will be informed if a teen unlinks the accounts.
OpenAI, which has about 700 million weekly active users for its ChatGPT products, is building an age prediction system to help it predict whether a user is under 18 so that the chatbot can automatically apply teen-appropriate settings.
Meta had also announced new teenager safeguards to its AI products last month. The company said it will train systems to avoid flirty conversations and discussions of self-harm or suicide with minors and temporarily restrict access to certain AI characters.
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