WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

1.4K

You know what? Maybe your kids should not be using "AI" toys or "IOT" toys. Maybe they shouldn't have screen at all that you do not directly control and even then only when they are at least 12-14 years old at a MINIMUM....

Don't get this shit for your kids. If you do, you are the problem. If they complain that their friends have it and they don't you know which friends they won't be staying overnight with anymore.

Adults have ended their lives over this "tech". Why would you let a child have access to it? It is also the death of curiosity and immigration. If the TV was the "idiot box" this is "death by brain rot".

Archive: https://archive.today/Ro2fp

From the post:

>A wave of AI-powered children’s toys has hit shelves this holiday season, claiming to rely on sophisticated chatbots to animate interactive robots and stuffed animals that can converse with kids. Children have been conversing with stuffies and figurines that seemingly chat with them for years, like Furbies and Build-A-Bears. But connecting the toys to advanced artificial intelligence opens up new and unexpected possible interactions between kids and technology. In new research, experts warn that the AI technology powering these new toys is so novel and poorly tested that nobody knows how they may affect young children.

You know what? Maybe your kids should not be using "AI" toys or "IOT" toys. Maybe they shouldn't have screen at all that you do not directly control and even then only when they are at least 12-14 years old at a MINIMUM.... Don't get this shit for your kids. If you do, you are the problem. If they complain that their friends have it and they don't you know which friends they won't be staying overnight with anymore. **Adults have ended their lives over this "tech". Why would you let a child have access to it? It is also the death of curiosity and immigration. If the TV was the "idiot box" this is "death by brain rot".** Archive: https://archive.today/Ro2fp From the post: >>A wave of AI-powered children’s toys has hit shelves this holiday season, claiming to rely on sophisticated chatbots to animate interactive robots and stuffed animals that can converse with kids. Children have been conversing with stuffies and figurines that seemingly chat with them for years, like Furbies and Build-A-Bears. But connecting the toys to advanced artificial intelligence opens up new and unexpected possible interactions between kids and technology. In new research, experts warn that the AI technology powering these new toys is so novel and poorly tested that nobody knows how they may affect young children.