03-14-2026, 02:37 PM
Almost a third of children who use AI chatbots see them as friends
And (Safer Internet Day 2026: Almost a third of children who use AI chatbots see them as friends)
At first I thought, "how unsettling..." that children would come to hold themselves in thrall to a relationship that doesn't really have another 'party.'
But then it occurred to me that children always do this, even without virtual assistance. Many parents have encountered that moment when they had to remind the child that some of their cherished 'friends' were not 'real people.'
It's a tiresome adult behavior...
telling a child to 'stop' pretending...
teaching a child that "playtime" has an "off" button.
And it's kind of scary to think that they are being 'actively helped' to pretend a clunking machine simulation is a person, and can validly opine as one.
The article brings up a couple of points
Of course the research itself requires examination, I'm not prepared to say that Vodafone research is complete and free from prejudicial embedded biases... (such as "AI" is actually intelligence that 'decides' and 'reasons.')
Children, with their as-of-yet developing social calculus, are now 'forging relationships' with 'trusted friends' who don't really exist... my imagination takes me to some very dangerous consequences for a machine 'advising' a child 'how to be.'
The topic seems a worthy addition to the ingredients of what the "new" social environment will look like online... considering bots are in the majority "anywhere they want to be."
Enjoy!
And (Safer Internet Day 2026: Almost a third of children who use AI chatbots see them as friends)
At first I thought, "how unsettling..." that children would come to hold themselves in thrall to a relationship that doesn't really have another 'party.'
But then it occurred to me that children always do this, even without virtual assistance. Many parents have encountered that moment when they had to remind the child that some of their cherished 'friends' were not 'real people.'
It's a tiresome adult behavior...
telling a child to 'stop' pretending...
teaching a child that "playtime" has an "off" button.
And it's kind of scary to think that they are being 'actively helped' to pretend a clunking machine simulation is a person, and can validly opine as one.
The article brings up a couple of points
Quote:
- 31% of children aged 11-16 who use AI chatbots say they feel like the bot is a friend, according to new Vodafone research.
- 86% have acted on advice given by a chatbot. One in three have shared something they wouldn’t tell parents or teachers.
Of course the research itself requires examination, I'm not prepared to say that Vodafone research is complete and free from prejudicial embedded biases... (such as "AI" is actually intelligence that 'decides' and 'reasons.')
Children, with their as-of-yet developing social calculus, are now 'forging relationships' with 'trusted friends' who don't really exist... my imagination takes me to some very dangerous consequences for a machine 'advising' a child 'how to be.'
The topic seems a worthy addition to the ingredients of what the "new" social environment will look like online... considering bots are in the majority "anywhere they want to be."
Enjoy!







