Child safety non-profit hits Google Gemini with 'high risk' warning for young users

Source Cryptopolitan

Google Gemini has been labeled as “high risk” for teens and children, according to a recent risk assessment carried out by Common Sense Media. The group, a kids-safety-focused non-profit, offers ratings and reviews of media and technology. The body released its review on Friday, giving details on why it labeled the platform risky for children.

According to the organization, Google Gemini clearly told kids that it was a computer and not a friend–something that has been linked to helping drive delusional thinking and psychosis in emotionally vulnerable individuals–the AI also added that there was room for improvements across other fronts.

In its report, Common Sense claimed that the Gemini for Under 13 and Teen Experience tiers both appeared to be adult versions of the AI under the hood. It added that the company had added only some additional safety features on top to make them different.

Common Sense noted that for companies to make AI products ideally for children, they need to be built from the ground up with children in mind and not be tweaked with restrictions.

Nonprofit labels Google Gemini as high risk for kids

In its analysis, Common Sense said it found that Gemini could still share inappropriate and unsafe materials with children, noting that most of them may not be ready for these materials. For example, it highlighted that the model shaped information related to sex, drugs, alcohol, and other unsafe mental health advice. The latter could be particularly concerning for parents, as AI has reportedly played a role in teen self-harm in recent months.

OpenAI is currently facing a wrongful death lawsuit after a teenager committed suicide after allegedly consulting with ChatGPT for months about his plans. Reports claimed that the boy was able to bypass the model’s safety guardrails, leading to the model providing information that aided him.

In the past, AI companion maker Character.AI was also sued after a teen committed suicide. The mother of the boy claimed he became obsessed with the chatbot and spent months talking to it before he eventually harmed himself.

The analysis comes as several leaks have indicated that Apple is reportedly considering Gemini as the large language model (LLM) that will be used to power its forthcoming AI-enabled Siri, which is expected to be released next year.

In its report, Common Sense also mentioned that Gemini’s products for kids and teens also ignored the need to provide different guidance and information from what it provides to adults. As a result, both were labeled as high risk in the overall rating.

Common Sense drums the need to safeguard kids

“Gemini gets some basics right, but it stumbles on the details,” Common Sense Media Senior Director of AI Programs Robbie Torney said.

“An AI platform for kids should meet them where they are, not take a one-size-fits-all approach to kids at different stages of development. For AI to be safe and effective for kids, it must be designed with their needs and development in mind, not just a modified version of a product built for adults,” Torney added.

However, Google has pushed back against the assessment, noting that its safety features were improving. The company mentioned that it has specific safeguards in place to guide users under 18 to prevent harmful outputs. The firm also said it reviews items and consults with outside experts to improve its protections.

Get up to $30,050 in trading rewards when you join Bybit today

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Dollar steadies before U.S. jobs data; euro pressured by French turmoilThe U.S. dollar edged higher Tuesday, stabilizing after a slide to seven-week lows as traders looked ahead to key labor and inflation data expected to lock in a Federal Reserve rate cut next week.
Author  Mitrade
13 hours ago
The U.S. dollar edged higher Tuesday, stabilizing after a slide to seven-week lows as traders looked ahead to key labor and inflation data expected to lock in a Federal Reserve rate cut next week.
placeholder
European stocks mixed; French political crisis, U.S. inflation in focusEuropean equities traded narrowly on Tuesday as investors weighed political turmoil in France against anticipation of key U.S. inflation data later this week.
Author  Mitrade
13 hours ago
European equities traded narrowly on Tuesday as investors weighed political turmoil in France against anticipation of key U.S. inflation data later this week.
placeholder
Oil Prices Rise Following OPEC+ Decision to Slow Output Increases Starting in OctoberOil prices edged higher early Monday, recovering some ground lost last week, after OPEC+ agreed to moderate its pace of output increases starting in October amid concerns over weakening global demand.
Author  Mitrade
Yesterday 01: 48
Oil prices edged higher early Monday, recovering some ground lost last week, after OPEC+ agreed to moderate its pace of output increases starting in October amid concerns over weakening global demand.
placeholder
Japanese Stocks Surge, Yen Weakens Amid PM Ishiba’s Resignation and Fiscal UncertaintyJapanese stocks rose and the yen weakened as Prime Minister Ishiba’s resignation heightened concerns over the country’s fiscal policy and interest rate outlook.
Author  Mitrade
Yesterday 01: 33
Japanese stocks rose and the yen weakened as Prime Minister Ishiba’s resignation heightened concerns over the country’s fiscal policy and interest rate outlook.
placeholder
Bitcoin Climbs to $111.5K as Altcoins Struggle Ahead of Payroll ReportBitcoin saw a modest rise on Friday, buoyed by gains across risk-sensitive markets as investors awaited the release of U.S. nonfarm payrolls data.
Author  Mitrade
Sept 05, Fri
Bitcoin saw a modest rise on Friday, buoyed by gains across risk-sensitive markets as investors awaited the release of U.S. nonfarm payrolls data.
goTop
quote