Character.AI Rolls Out New Parental Insights Feature Amid Safety Concerns

Chatbot platform Character.AI has introduced a new Parental Insights feature aimed at giving parents a window into their children's activity on the platform. The feature allows users under 18 to share a weekly report of their chatbot interactions directly with a parent's e-mail address.

The move comes as the company, which has faced criticism and multiple lawsuits over its handling of minors' safety, seeks to bolster its parental oversight tools and ensure its platform is used more responsibly.

Parental Insights was designed to provide parents with an overview of their child's activity on Character.AI without sharing specific chat logs or conversations. According to the company, the weekly report includes key details such as the average daily time a child spends on both the web and mobile platforms, the characters they interact with most frequently, and how much time they spend chatting with each of those characters.

"We are a small team here at Character.AI, but many of us are parents who know firsthand the challenge of navigating new technologies while raising teenagers," the company said in a blog post. "Over the past year, we have rolled out a suite of new safety features across our platform, designed specifically with teens in mind. These features include a separate model for our teen users, improvements to our detection and intervention systems for human behavior and model responses, and more."

The feature is optional, and teens can activate or deactivate it via their account settings. Once set up, parents can receive the reports automatically without needing to create an account on the platform themselves. If a teen wishes to revoke parental access to this data at any point, they can do so, but the request will require confirmation from the parent.

The platform, which allows users to create and interact with customized AI chatbots, has been widely popular among teenagers, but its content moderation policies have been called into question after reports of bots offering content that could be potentially dangerous.

In response to these concerns, Character.AI has implemented several safety features over the past year. These include a new model tailored to users under 18 that is trained to avoid sensitive or inappropriate output, as well as clear notifications that remind users their interactions are with AI, not real people. The platform has also introduced time-spent alerts and restrictions on sensitive content, aiming to foster a safer environment for younger users.

About the Author

John K. Waters is the editor in chief of a number of Converge360.com sites, with a focus on high-end development, AI and future tech. He's been writing about cutting-edge technologies and culture of Silicon Valley for more than two decades, and he's written more than a dozen books. He also co-scripted the documentary film Silicon Valley: A 100 Year Renaissance, which aired on PBS.  He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • hand touching glowing connected dots

    Registration Now Open for Tech Tactics in Education: Thriving in the Age of AI

    Tech Tactics in Education has officially opened registration for its May 7 virtual conference on "Thriving in the Age of AI." The annual event, brought to you by the producers of Campus Technology and THE Journal, offers hands-on learning and interactive discussions on the most critical technology issues and practices across K–12 and higher education.

  • outline of a modern school building as glowing blue geometric shapes, surrounded by binary code streams, with golden orbs and lines representing funding, set against a dark gray gradient with faint grid patterns

    FCC Cybersecurity Pilot Participants Selected

    The Federal Communications Commission has officially selected the participants for its Schools and Libraries Cybersecurity Pilot, the three-year program exploring the use of Universal Service funds to improve school and library defenses against cyber attacks.

  • Google Classroom tools

    Google Announces Classroom Updates, New Tools for Chromebooks

    Google has introduced a variety of features across its products for education, announced recently at the 2025 BETT ed tech event in London. Among the additions are enhancements to Google Classroom and new tools for Chromebooks, "designed to help address the diverse needs of students around the world," Google said in a blog post.

  • group of elementary school students designing video games on computers in a modern classroom with a teacher, depicted in a geometric and abstract style

    Using Video Game Design to Teach Literacy Skills

    The Max Schoenfeld School, a public school in the Bronx serving one of the poorest communities in the nation, is taking an innovative approach to improving student literacy.