AI-powered search isn’t ready for children yet — and the issue isn’t just technical, it’s about trust. When a tool responds with confidence, even when it’s wrong, kids don’t question it. So it’s not something parents can just “enable and forget.”
Parents need to be more intentional about what their kids use: turn on parental controls, limit the types of apps, and most importantly, talk about what shows up on the screen. Technology shouldn’t replace guidance. Now more than ever, staying involved makes all the difference.
AI-powered search isn’t ready for children yet — and the issue isn’t just technical, it’s about trust. When a tool responds with confidence, even when it’s wrong, kids don’t question it. So it’s not something parents can just “enable and forget.” Parents need to be more intentional about what their kids use: turn on parental controls, limit the types of apps, and most importantly, talk about what shows up on the screen. Technology shouldn’t replace guidance. Now more than ever, staying involved makes all the difference.