Do A.I. chatbots packaged inside cute-looking plushies provide a viable various to display screen time for teenagers?
That’s how the businesses promoting these A.I.-powered kiddie companions are advertising and marketing them, however The New York Instances’ Amanda Hess has some reservations. She recounts an illustration through which Grem, one of many choices from startup Curio, tried to bond along with her. (Curio additionally sells a plushie named Grok, with no obvious connection to the Elon Musk-owned chatbot.)
Hess writes that that is when she knew, “I might not be introducing Grem to my very own youngsters.” As she talked to the chatbot, she grew to become satisfied it was “much less an improve to the lifeless teddy bear” and as a substitute “extra like a alternative for me.”
She additionally argues that whereas these speaking toys may hold children away from a pill or TV display screen, what they’re actually speaking is that “the pure endpoint for [children’s] curiosity lies inside their telephones.”
Hess experiences that she did, finally, let her children play with Grem — however solely after she’d eliminated and hidden the voice field. They nonetheless talked to it and performed video games with it; then they have been prepared for some TV.