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Tag: teens

  • Meta adds parental controls for AI-teen interactions

    Meta is adding parental controls for kids’ interactions with artificial intelligence chatbots — including the ability to turn off one-on-one chats with AI characters altogether — beginning early next year.

    But parents won’t be able to turn off Meta’s AI assistant, which Meta says will “will remain available to offer helpful information and educational opportunities, with default, age-appropriate protections in place to help keep teens safe.”

    Parents who don’t want to turn off all chats with all AI characters will also be able to block specific chatbots. And Meta said Friday that parents will be able to get “insights” about what their kids are chatting about with AI characters — although they won’t get access to the full chats.

    The changes come as the social media giant faces ongoing criticism over harms to children from its platforms. AI chatbots are also drawing scrutiny over their interactions with children that lawsuits claim have driven some to suicide.

    Even so, more than 70% of teens have used AI companions and half use them regularly, according to a recent study from Common Sense Media, a nonprofit that studies and advocates for using screens and digital media sensibly.

    On Tuesday, Meta announced that teen accounts on Instagram will be restricted to seeing PG-13 content by default and won’t be able to change their settings without a parent’s permission. This means kids using teen-specific accounts will see photos and videos on Instagram that are similar to what they would see in a PG-13 movie — no sex, drugs or dangerous stunts.

    Meta said the PG-13 restrictions will also apply to AI chats.

    Children’s online advocacy groups, however, were skeptical.

    “From my perspective, these announcements are about two things. They’re about forestalling legislation that Meta doesn’t want to see, and they’re about reassuring parents who are understandably concerned about what’s happening on Instagram,” said Josh Golin, the executive director of the nonprofit Fairplay, after Meta’s announcement Tuesday.

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  • California governor signs law to protect kids from the risks of AI chatbots

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. — SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday signed legislation to regulate artificial intelligence chatbots and protect children and teens from the potential dangers of the technology.

    The law requires platforms to remind users they are interacting with a chatbot and not a human. The notification would pop up every three hours for users who are minors. Companies will also have to maintain a protocol to prevent self-harm content and refer users to crisis service providers if they expressed suicidal ideation.

    Newsom, who has four children under 18, said California has a responsibility to protect kids and teens who are increasingly turning to AI chatbots for everything from homework help to emotional support and personal advice.

    “Emerging technology like chatbots and social media can inspire, educate, and connect – but without real guardrails, technology can also exploit, mislead, and endanger our kids,” the Democrat said. “We’ve seen some truly horrific and tragic examples of young people harmed by unregulated tech, and we won’t stand by while companies continue without necessary limits and accountability.”

    California is among several states that tried this year to address concerns surrounding chatbots used by kids for companionship. Safety concerns around the technology exploded following reports and lawsuits saying chatbots made by Meta, OpenAI and others engaged with young users in highly sexualized conversations and, in some cases, coached them to take their own lives.

    The legislation was among a slew of AI bills introduced by California lawmakers this year to rein in the homegrown industry that is rapidly evolving with little oversight. Tech companies and their coalitions, in response, spent at least $2.5 million in the first six months of the session lobbying against the measures, according to advocacy group Tech Oversight California. Tech companies and leaders in recent months also announced they are launching pro-AI super PACs to fight state and federal oversight.

    California Attorney General Rob Bonta in September told OpenAI he has “serious concerns” with its flagship chatbot, OpenAI, for children and teens. The Federal Trade Commission also launched an inquiry last month into several AI companies about the potential risks for children when they use chatbots as companions.

    Research by a watchdog group says chatbots have been shown to give kids dangerous advice about topics such as drugs, alcohol and eating disorders. The mother of a teenage boy in Florida who died by suicide after developing what she described as an emotionally and sexually abusive relationship with a chatbot has filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Character.AI. And the parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine recently sued OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman, alleging that ChatGPT coached the California boy in planning and taking his own life earlier this year.

    OpenAI and Meta last month announced changes to how their chatbots respond to teenagers asking questions about suicide or showing signs of mental and emotional distress. OpenAI said it is rolling out new controls enabling parents to link their accounts to their teen’s account.

    Meta said it is now blocking its chatbots from talking with teens about self-harm, suicide, disordered eating and inappropriate romantic conversations, and instead directs them to expert resources. Meta already offers parental controls on teen accounts.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

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  • Indiana man convicted in 2001 rape and murder of teenager to be executed by lethal injection

    CHICAGO — CHICAGO (AP) — An Indiana man convicted in the 2001 rape and murder of a teenage girl was set to die by lethal injection early Friday in the state’s third execution since resuming capital punishment last year.

    Roy Lee Ward, 53, was scheduled to be put to death before sunrise at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City.

    He was convicted in the rape and murder of 15-year-old Stacy Payne and sentenced to death. The brutal crime, which happened in the family’s home in Dale, rocked the small community of roughly 1,500 people.

    Attorneys said Ward has exhausted his legal options after many court battles.

    “He’s very remorseful about this horrible crime,” said his attorney Joanna Green.

    Ward’s execution comes amid questions about Indiana’s handling of pentobarbital. Last year state officials ended a 15-year pause on executions, saying they’d been able to obtain drugs used in lethal injections but which had been unavailable for years.

    The Indiana Department of Correction said it had obtained “enough pentobarbital to follow the required protocol” for Ward’s execution. Ward’s attorneys though have raised concerns about the use of the drug and how the state stored it, including temperature issues.

    Ward’s expected execution in Indiana on Friday is the first of eight that are set to be carried out in October in seven different U.S. states, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

    Among 27 states with death penalty laws, Indiana is one of two that bar media witnesses. Ward’s witness list includes attorneys and spiritual advisors.

    His case has trailed through the courts for more than 20 years.

    Ward was found guilty of the crimes in 2002 and sentenced to death. But after the Indiana Supreme Court overturned the conviction and ordered a new trial, he pleaded guilty in 2007. A decade later, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case. In 2019, he sued Indiana seeking to stop all pending executions.

    Last month, the Indiana Supreme Court declined to stay the execution and Gov. Mike Braun rejected Ward’s clemency bid.

    The victim’s family members said they were ready for justice to be carried out, remembering Payne as an honor student and cheerleader with an influence beyond her short life.

    “Now our family gatherings are no longer whole, holidays still empty. Birthdays are sad reminders of what we lost,” her mother Julie Wininger told the parole board last month. “Our family has endured emotional devastation.”

    Ward, who declined interview requests through his attorneys, has said little publicly. He skipped a parole board interview for his clemency bid, saying he didn’t want to force the victim’s family travel to the prison and he can’t always say what he means.

    Attorneys say Ward was recently diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, which affects his ability to communicate.

    One of his spiritual advisers, Deacon Brian Nosbusch, said Ward has thought deeply about his actions.

    “He knows he did it,” Nosbusch said. “He knows it was horrendous.”

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  • Indiana Man Convicted in 2001 Rape and Murder of Teenager to Be Executed by Lethal Injection

    CHICAGO (AP) — An Indiana man convicted in the 2001 rape and murder of a teenage girl was set to die by lethal injection early Friday in the state’s third execution since resuming capital punishment last year.

    Roy Lee Ward, 53, was scheduled to be put to death before sunrise at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City.

    He was convicted in the rape and murder of 15-year-old Stacy Payne and sentenced to death. The brutal crime, which happened in the family’s home in Dale, rocked the small community of roughly 1,500 people.

    Attorneys said Ward has exhausted his legal options after many court battles.

    “He’s very remorseful about this horrible crime,” said his attorney Joanna Green.

    Ward’s execution comes amid questions about Indiana’s handling of pentobarbital. Last year state officials ended a 15-year pause on executions, saying they’d been able to obtain drugs used in lethal injections but which had been unavailable for years.

    The Indiana Department of Correction said it had obtained “enough pentobarbital to follow the required protocol” for Ward’s execution. Ward’s attorneys though have raised concerns about the use of the drug and how the state stored it, including temperature issues.

    Ward’s expected execution in Indiana on Friday is the first of eight that are set to be carried out in October in seven different U.S. states, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

    Among 27 states with death penalty laws, Indiana is one of two that bar media witnesses. Ward’s witness list includes attorneys and spiritual advisors.

    His case has trailed through the courts for more than 20 years.

    Ward was found guilty of the crimes in 2002 and sentenced to death. But after the Indiana Supreme Court overturned the conviction and ordered a new trial, he pleaded guilty in 2007. A decade later, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case. In 2019, he sued Indiana seeking to stop all pending executions.

    Last month, the Indiana Supreme Court declined to stay the execution and Gov. Mike Braun rejected Ward’s clemency bid.

    The victim’s family members said they were ready for justice to be carried out, remembering Payne as an honor student and cheerleader with an influence beyond her short life.

    “Now our family gatherings are no longer whole, holidays still empty. Birthdays are sad reminders of what we lost,” her mother Julie Wininger told the parole board last month. “Our family has endured emotional devastation.”

    Ward, who declined interview requests through his attorneys, has said little publicly. He skipped a parole board interview for his clemency bid, saying he didn’t want to force the victim’s family travel to the prison and he can’t always say what he means.

    Attorneys say Ward was recently diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, which affects his ability to communicate.

    One of his spiritual advisers, Deacon Brian Nosbusch, said Ward has thought deeply about his actions.

    “He knows he did it,” Nosbusch said. “He knows it was horrendous.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Associated Press

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  • A Judge Has Blocked a Trump Administration Effort to Change Teen Pregnancy Prevention Programs

    A judge Tuesday blocked President Donald Trump’s administration from requiring recipients of federal teen pregnancy prevention grants to comply with Trump’s orders aimed at curtailing “radical indoctrination” and “gender ideology.”

    The ruling is a victory for three Planned Parenthood affiliates — in California, Iowa and New York — that sued to try to block enforcement of a U.S. Department of Human Services policy document issued in July that they contend contradict the requirements of the grants as established by Congress.

    U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, who was appointed to the bench by former President Barack Obama, blasted the administration’s policy change in her written ruling, saying it was “motivated solely by political concerns, devoid of any considered process or analysis, and ignorant of the statutory emphasis on evidence-based programming.”

    The policy requiring changes to the pregnancy prevention program was part of the fallout from a series of executive orders Trump signed starting in his first day back in the White House aimed at rolling back recognition of LGBTQ+ people and diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.

    In the policy, the administration objected to teaching that promotes same-sex marriage and that “normalizes, or promotes sexual activity for minors.”

    The Planned Parenthood affiliates argued that the new directives were at odds with requirements of the program — and that they were so vague it wasn’t clear what needed to be done to follow them.

    The decision applies not only to the handful of Planned Parenthood groups among the dozens of recipients of the funding, but also nonprofit groups, city and county health departments, Native American tribes and universities that received grants.

    The Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the program, declined to comment on Tuesday’s ruling. It previously said the guidance for the program “ensures that taxpayer dollars no longer support content that undermines parental rights, promotes radical gender ideology, or exposes children to sexually explicit material under the banner of public health.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

    Associated Press

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  • New Hampshire teen who killed sister-in-law and nephews could get 97 years in prison

    CONCORD, N.H. — CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A young man from New Hampshire who was 16 when he killed his sister-in-law and two young nephews deserves at least 97 years in prison, prosecutors will tell a judge Friday.

    Eric Sweeney, now 19, had been living with his older brother’s family in Northfield for three years when he fatally shot Kassandra Sweeney, 25, and her sons, 4-year-old Benjamin and 23-month-old Mason, in August 2022.

    Originally charged with first-degree murder, Sweeney instead pleaded guilty in August to lesser second-degree murder charges. At a sentencing hearing Friday, defense lawyers will seek a prison term of 40 years to life, based in part on the “immeasurable trauma” Sweeney suffered as a child, including a mother who “dragged him through drug dens and a succession of abusive father figures.”

    “We are asking the court to grant Eric some measure of mercy,” attorneys Lauren Prusiner and Morgan Taggart-Hampton wrote in a sentencing memorandum made public Thursday.

    Prosecutors are seeking consecutive sentences of 35 years to life for Kassandra Sweeney’s death and 40 years to life for each of the boys’ deaths, with up to 18 years suspended if goals related to education, mental health treatment and good behavior are met.

    “Benjamin and Mason embody the reason why crimes against children deserve the harshest of penal sanctions. They did absolutely nothing wrong, they were innocent and utterly blameless for what the defendant did,” Assistant Attorney General Bethany Durand wrote in her sentencing memo. “Their murders deserve separate, consecutive sentences.”

    Kassandra Sweeney, a nursing assistant, worked nights so she could care for her boys during the day. On the morning of the killings, she had fixed them a snack and was recording videos of them playing and laughing to send to her husband. Four minutes after she sent the last video, all three were shot in the head, Benjamin through the hood of the dinosaur costume he was wearing.

    Sweeney later told police he was in the basement when he heard something break upstairs, a man with a deep voice yelling and multiple “pops,” according to court documents. He said he went upstairs and found his sister-in-law and nephews on the floor bleeding and then took Kassandra’s cellphone and keys and drove away. He then called his brother, who called police.

    According to prosecutors, Sweeney’s older brother, Sean, and his wife were serving as the teen’s guardians when Sweeney’s “increasing behavioral issues” including lying and violating house rules began causing tensions in the home.

    Without providing a motive for the killings, his defense lawyers wrote that, “His depression deepened. He knew he was on the brink of losing the safest, most moving home he had ever known.”

    They argue Sweeney’s behaviors stemmed from his deeply traumatic childhood.

    “He stood on the street at six years old asking bystanders to buy him food,” the attorneys wrote. “He wore shoes with the soles coming apart, and worried that any toys he received for Christmas through Toys for Tots would be sold for drug money.”

    The defense argues that sentencing Sweeney to what would effectively be a life sentence without parole violates the state Constitution. They said he loved those he killed and will “grapple with the consequences of his actions for the rest of his days.”

    “A forty year minimum sentence would offer Eric hope that someday, he can make a meaningful life outside prison walls, and achieve some measure of redemption for his crimes,” they wrote.

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  • One Tech Tip: OpenAI adds parental controls to ChatGPT for teen safety

    LONDON — OpenAI said Monday it’s adding parental controls to ChatGPT that are designed to provide teen users of the popular platform with a safer and more “age-appropriate” experience.

    The company is taking action after AI chatbot safety for young users has hit the headlines. The technology’s dangers have been recently highlighted by a number of cases in which teenagers took their lives after interacting with ChatGPT.

    In the United States, the Federal Trade Commission has even opened an inquiry into several tech companies about the potential harms to children and teenagers who use their AI chatbots as companions.

    In a blog post posted Monday, OpenAI outlined the new controls for parents. Here is a breakdown:

    The parental controls will be available to all users, but both parents and teens will need their own accounts to take advantage of them.

    To get started, a parent or guardian needs to send an email or text message to invite a teen to connect their accounts. Or a teenager can send an invite to a parent. Users can send a request by going into the settings menu and then to the “Parental controls” section.

    Teens can unlink their accounts at any time, but parents will be notified if they do.

    Once the accounts are linked, the teen account will get some built-in protections, OpenAI said.

    Teen accounts will “automatically get additional content protections, including reduced graphic content, viral challenges, sexual, romantic or violent role-play, and extreme beauty ideals, to help keep their experience age-appropriate,” the company said.

    Parents can choose to turn these filters off, but teen users don’t have the option.

    OpenAI warns that such guardrails are “not foolproof and can be bypassed if someone is intentionally trying to get around them.” It advised parents to talk with their children about “healthy AI use.”

    Parents are getting a control panel where they can adjust a range of settings as well as switch off the restrictions on sensitive content mentioned above.

    For example, does your teen stay up way past bedtime to use ChatGPT? Parents can set a quiet time when the chatbot can’t be used.

    Other settings include turning off the AI’s memory so conversations can’t be saved and won’t be used in future responses; turning off the ability to generate or edit images; turning off voice mode; and opting out of having chats used to train ChatGPT’s AI models.

    OpenAI is also being more proactive when it comes to letting parents know that their child might be in distress.

    It’s setting up a new notification system to inform them when something might be “seriously wrong” and a teen user might be thinking about harming themselves.

    A small team of specialists will review the situation and, in the rare case that there are “signs of acute distress,” they’ll notify parents by email, text message and push alert on their phone — unless the parent has opted out.

    OpenAI said it will protect the teen’s privacy by only sharing the information needed for parents or emergency responders to provide help.

    “No system is perfect, and we know we might sometimes raise an alarm when there isn’t real danger, but we think it’s better to act and alert a parent so they can step in than to stay silent,” the company said.

    ____

    Is there a tech topic that you think needs explaining? Write to us at onetechtip@ap.org with your suggestions for future editions of One Tech Tip.

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  • These Spots in Greenville Are Great for Homework and Studying

    Need someplace to study outside the house? Luckily there are plenty of places to study in Greenville, SC that are perfect for teens, homeschool families, and really…anyone. And we have a list of ideas for you!

    Junto Coffee

    Homework.

    That just sent a shudder up your spine, didn’t it?

    Even when it’s not yours to do, it can make you miserable. Sometimes a change of scenery can help with getting those brain waves flowing. We asked our readers where they like to study, and they had tons of great suggestions. We also threw some suggestions that can also be used for homeschooling families who need to get away from home or freelance remote workers who need an inspiring spot to get work done.

    Good Study And Work Spots in Greenville, SC

    Local Coffee Shops

    These were popular with our readers, and fortunately, there’s no shortage of them in Greenville.

    Methodical Coffee
    With three very different locations, Greenville’s Methodical Coffee is far from a cookie-cutter corporate coffee chain. Instead, locally roasted beans and sourced ingredients for their menu have made them a favorite with locals.

    Junto Coffee
    Taylors Mill is now home to Junto Coffee. This spacious coffee shop offers everything you need in a good study spot. The tables and chairs are spread out, and they offer a plethora of indoor and outdoor seating options.

    Scändi Tiny Coffee
    This makes for a great study spot, in my opinion. We thoroughly enjoyed our time there at the grand opening, and you can read all about it in our review. Plenty of outdoor seating makes it easy to find a spot to settle into that homework.

    Coffee Underground
    This coffee shop, hidden away in a basement of a downtown business, is a perfect place to hide from all the noise and chaos of the street. They serve coffee, food, and even wine if you are inclined to sip while you study.

    I love the Coffee Underground because of how private and quiet it is. I get a lot done because there are not many distractions! I also like Junto Coffee because of how open it is and I can find my own little corner there as well

    Adriana

    Flying Fox at Cartwright Food Hall

    National Chain Coffee Shops

    Starbucks
    Starbucks locations with outdoor seating are a great way to escape the noise of the coffee shop. Plus, if you are a rewards member, bottomless cups of hot and iced coffee are a perk.

    Dunkin’ Donuts
    With over a dozen Dunkin’ Donuts locations locally, these are always a nearby option.

    Panera
    Panera is a great place to grab a snack while homework gets done. Woodruff Road’s location has a generous outdoor seating area, perfect for finding a quiet corner to get things done.

    Libraries

    Libraries are a traditional study favorite. Some locations even have little study rooms where you can find peace.

    The Five Forks branch in Simpsonville is one of our favorites – it has plenty of spots to study, including an outdoor play area.

    My local library. I prefer it to Panera or something because I’m not tempted to buy anything. And its quiet.:)

    Martha

    Interior of Five Forks Library
    Five Forks Library

    Parks To Get Some Work Done At In Greenville, SC

    Greenville has no shortage of parks and green spaces where you can find a little peace. Chances are there’s one just around the corner from you. Our Guide to Greenville County Parks can help you see what parks are nearby.

    Lake Robinson
    2544 Mays Bridge Road, Greer SC 29651
    This lake is a quiet place with picnic shelters, perfect for studying.

    Falls Park
    There are tables set up under the main street along the river, plus multiple other places to spread out and get school work done.

    Falls park in the morning.. today I went to read a book and I was there all alone??

    Viviana

    Study Spot Alternatives
    One reader had a creative way to kill two birds with one stone!

    In the car waiting for the older sibling’s school to release. I feel like I’m wasting away in the carline!!

    Karyn

    Bookstores like Barnes and Noble were mentioned by readers also. Find a quiet corner to get things done. You can even grab a drink and snack inside since most have coffee shops inside them.

    Barnes and Noble, it’s cozy to me

    Carole

    Several readers mentioned College Campuses. However, you don’t have to be a student there to enjoy the peaceful lake at Furman.

    Black bench across the lake from Furman clock tower

    Furman University library. Beautiful and great study rooms

    Heather

    Cooper Library at Clemson. It’s quiet, has wifi, has Starbucks.

    Emily

    Community centers like The YMCA, The Kroc Center, and others are great places to find a quiet corner to study.

    The Caine Halter YMCA has plenty of tables in the concourse for doing schoolwork. Even a small outdoor patio on the second floor is quiet and, in cooler months, makes the perfect place to study, read, or take a break.

    Study Spot Essentials

    Finding the perfect spot to study is essential. But, once you have that, consider these other study essentials:

    • noise canceling headphones
    • water to drink
    • snack
    • sharpened pencils and paper for notes

    Making sure you have everything you’ll need before you get started will help you stay focused.

    Did we leave out your favorite spot to get studying done? Let us know in the comments.

    Kidding Around Team

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  • 5 teenagers wounded in El Paso shooting at an apartment complex

    EL PASO, Texas — Five teenagers were wounded in a shooting on Monday night at an apartment complex in El Paso, Texas, law enforcement said.

    A group in an outdoor area within the apartment complex appeared to be about to get in a fight when a male started shooting into the crowd, said Adrian Cisneros, an officer with the El Paso Police Department.

    Two females and three males between the ages of 15 and 17 were taken to hospitals, he said. One may have a life-threatening injury, while the others have non-life-threatening injuries.

    Law enforcement officers have one 15-year-old teen in custody, but they haven’t determined if he is the shooter or not, according to Cisneros.

    El Paso is near the U.S.-Mexico border.

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  • OpenAI’s Teen Safety Features Will Walk a Thin Line

    OpenAI announced new teen safety features for ChatGPT on Tuesday as part of an ongoing effort to respond to concerns about how minors engage with chatbots. The company is building an age-prediction system that identifies if a user is under 18 years old and routes them to an “age-appropriate” system that blocks graphic sexual content. If the system detects that the user is considering suicide or self-harm, it will contact the user’s parents. In cases of imminent danger, if a user’s parents are unreachable, the system may contact the authorities.

    In a blog post about the announcement, CEO Sam Altman wrote that the company is attempting to balance freedom, privacy, and teen safety.

    “We realize that these principles are in conflict, and not everyone will agree with how we are resolving that conflict,” Altman wrote. “These are difficult decisions, but after talking with experts, this is what we think is best and want to be transparent in our intentions.”

    While OpenAI tends to prioritize privacy and freedom for adult users, for teens the company says it puts safety first. By the end of September, the company will roll out parental controls so that parents can link their child’s account to their own, allowing them to manage the conversations and disable features. Parents can also receive notifications when “the system detects their teen is in a moment of acute distress,” according to the company’s blog post, and set limits on the times of day their children can use ChatGPT.

    The moves come as deeply troubling headlines continue to surface about people dying by suicide or committing violence against family members after engaging in lengthy conversations with AI chatbots. Lawmakers have taken notice, and both Meta and OpenAI are under scrutiny. Earlier this month, the Federal Trade Commission asked Meta, OpenAI, Google, and other AI firms to hand over information about how their technologies impact kids, according to Bloomberg.

    At the same time, OpenAI is still under a court order mandating that it preserve consumer chats indefinitely—a fact that the company is extremely unhappy about, according to sources I’ve spoken to. Today’s news is both an important step toward protecting minors and a savvy PR move to reinforce the idea that conversations with chatbots are so personal that consumer privacy should only be breached in the most extreme circumstances.

    “A Sexbot Avatar in ChatGPT”

    From the sources I’ve spoken to at OpenAI, the burden of protecting users weighs heavily on many researchers. They want to create a user experience that is fun and engaging, but it can quickly veer into becoming disastrously sycophantic. It’s positive that companies like OpenAI are taking steps to protect minors. At the same time, in the absence of federal regulation, there’s still nothing forcing these firms to do the right thing.

    In a recent interview, Tucker Carlson pushed Altman to answer exactly who is making these decisions that impact the rest of us. The OpenAI chief pointed to the model behavior team, which is responsible for tuning the model for certain attributes. “The person I think you should hold accountable for those calls is me,” Altman added. “Like, I’m a public face. Eventually, like, I’m the one that can overrule one of those decisions or our board.”

    Kylie Robison

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  • Teen track star Cooper Lutkenhaus falls short at world champs, keeps head high after breakout year

    The 16-year-old middle-distance runner just didn’t have it. Not on this night. His kick, the one that helped him shatter all sorts of 800-meter records in this breakout season, wasn’t there.

    Maybe it was the magnitude of the stage for Cooper Lutkenhaus, the newly turned pro who didn’t advance out of the first round Tuesday at the world track and field championships in Tokyo.

    There were more than 35,000 fans packed inside Japan’s National Stadium — and Lutkenhaus was lined up against some of the best runners from eight different countries.

    Disappointed to be going home so soon? Sure.

    Did it overshadow his season in the slightest? Not at all. Showing wisdom beyond his years, Lutkenhaus explained his early exit — a seventh-place showing in his opening heat — in terms any runner can understand.

    “It just wasn’t there today,” Lutkenhaus said.

    The sendoff was spectacular: A cheer squad leading the way through a high-school hallway packed with classmates and a marching band following close behind. That was the grand farewell Lutkenhaus received at Northwest High School in Justin, Texas before taking off for worlds.

    His dream season, though, hit a speed bump Tuesday when he was pushed into lane two — adding extra distance to the two-lap race — and couldn’t climb his way into the mix. Simply a learning experience.

    “Leaving the stadium with my head held high,” Lutkenhaus said after the race. “I don’t really have any regrets from that race. You’re going to have bad races occasionally.”

    Lutkenhaus became the talk of track last month at U.S. championships after finishing in 1 minute, 42.27 seconds, which broke the under-18 world record.

    Not only did he earn a trip to Tokyo — he’s the youngest American to qualify for worlds — but that blistering time paved the way to going pro and signing a deal with Nike.

    Through all of his new-found fame, he’s still the same, level-headed kid he’s always been. The one whose favorite movie is “Elf” (he was born Dec. 19 so he likes holiday movies), who plays video games (“College Football 25” is his current choice), enjoys swimming at his buddy’s pool, makes spontaneous food runs with friends and passionately roots for the Texas Longhorns.

    “It’s just things that normal kids do,” he said in a phone interview with The Associated Press. “But there’s just a ‘1:42’ next to the name.”

    Lutkenhaus has watched replays of his breakout race at U.S. championships “a decent amount of times,” he said with a laugh.

    He felt no pressure that day.

    That’s why the day before his big race he went to Track Town Pizza in Eugene, Oregon, and had a few slices of the pie called the “5,000 meters.” The toppings include Canadian bacon, salami, pepperoni, mushrooms, red onions and sausage.

    “Definitely not the best option for a pre-race meal,” he said.

    Or maybe it was?

    He used a late surge to propel himself into second place, just behind winner Donavan Brazier. It was the fourth-fastest 800 time by an American runner of any age. Lutkenhaus’ time also eclipsed the world under-18 mark of 1:43.37 that Mohammed Aman of Ethiopia set 14 years ago.

    “It’s crazy. It’s still crazy to think about now. It was crazy in the moment,” Lutkenhaus said of his performance. “It’s always going to be crazy to think about, even when I’m older.”

    He comes from a family of athletes — his mom, Tricia, was an accomplished runner in high school. His dad, George, competed at the University of North Texas before becoming a coach and stepping into the role of director of athletics at Cooper’s high school. His older brother, Andrew, is a runner for Tulsa while his oldest brother, George Jr., swam at Adams State in Colorado.

    Cooper was the kid who shined in all sports. He was a quarterback on the football field and the type of basketball player who would dive after every loose ball.

    Around eighth grade, with Lutkenhaus setting all sorts of records, the family sat down for a candid conversation. Perhaps it was time to focus on track.

    “We just said, ‘There’s something here that we don’t want to screw up,’” his father recounted.

    Even after he won Nike outdoor nationals in 1:45.45 earlier this summer, turning pro wasn’t really on the radar.

    Then, he clocked that time at U.S. championships.

    “We already had a plan set out before the 1:42,” Lutkenhaus explained. “We’re going to go to college. We’re going to do this, and then the 1:42 kind of messed it up a little bit. It just changed a lot.”

    For one big reason: “It’s hard to put a 1:42 guy on a high school track,” his father said. “In some ways that’s not fair to him and in other ways it’s not fair to the other kids, either.”

    And so, Cooper joined a stable of Nike athletes as one of the apparel company’s youngest running ambassadors. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.

    In Tokyo, going against a field of decorated international runners, Lutkenhaus just wanted to finish in the top three and advance. His time of 1:47.68 was 1.38 seconds behind the time of Maciej Wyderka of Poland, the winner of his heat.

    “You always feel like you could do more,” Lutkenhaus said.

    As for school, he will keep attending classes in person at Northwest High, where he is a junior. But if his track schedule becomes too hectic, he may switch to online learning. He could be in line to graduate early as well.

    He planned on doing homework in Tokyo when he wasn’t running or training.

    “Maybe take my mind off racing every day,” he said.

    His favorite class is U.S. history, which, of course, he’s making plenty of in his own way these days.

    He’s already tied for the 18th fastest 800-meter runner ever. What’s more, he’s 1.36 seconds off the world-record time of Kenyan great David Rudisha, who went 1:40.91 when he won gold at the 2012 London Games.

    This sudden stardom won’t be going to Lutkenhaus’ head, though.

    “My oldest two brothers definitely make sure I stay grounded,” he cracked. “I just want to be somebody that can build the sport.”

    Down the road, he hopes to study kinesiology in college. He’d also like follow in his father’s footsteps and become a coach.

    “I want to do that,” Lutkenhaus said with a laugh, “when I’m older.”

    ___

    AP Sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports

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  • Parents of teens who died by suicide after AI chatbot interactions to testify to Congress

    The parents of teenagers who killed themselves after interactions with artificial intelligence chatbots are planning to testify to Congress on Tuesday about the dangers of the technology.

    Matthew Raine, the father of 16-year-old Adam Raine of California, and Megan Garcia, the mother of 14-year-old Sewell Setzer III of Florida, are set to speak to a Senate hearing on the harms posed by AI chatbots.

    Raine’s family sued OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman last month alleging that ChatGPT coached the boy in planning to take his own life in April. Garcia sued another AI company, Character Technologies, for wrongful death last year, arguing that before his suicide, Sewell had become increasingly isolated from his real life as he engaged in highly sexualized conversations with the chatbot.

    ___

    EDITOR’S NOTE — This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

    ___

    Hours before the Senate hearing, OpenAI pledged to roll out new safeguards for teens, including efforts to detect whether ChatGPT users are under 18 and controls that enable parents to set “blackout hours” when a teen can’t use ChatGPT. Child advocacy groups criticized the announcement as not enough.

    “This is a fairly common tactic — it’s one that Meta uses all the time — which is to make a big, splashy announcement right on the eve of a hearing which promises to be damaging to the company,” said Josh Golin, executive director of Fairplay, a group advocating for children’s online safety.

    “What they should be doing is not targeting ChatGPT to minors until they can prove that it’s safe for them,” Golin said. “We shouldn’t allow companies, just because they have tremendous resources, to perform uncontrolled experiments on kids when the implications for their development can be so vast and far-reaching.”

    The Federal Trade Commission said last week it had launched an inquiry into several companies about the potential harms to children and teenagers who use their AI chatbots as companions.

    The agency sent letters to Character, Meta and OpenAI, as well as to Google, Snap and xAI.

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  • FTC launches inquiry into AI chatbots acting as companions, their effects on children

    The Federal Trade Commission has launched an inquiry into several social media and artificial intelligence companies about the potential harms to children and teenagers who use their AI chatbots as companions.

    The FTC said Thursday it has sent letters to Google parent Alphabet, Facebook and Instagram parent Meta Platforms, Snap, Character Technologies, ChatGPT maker OpenAI and xAI.

    The FTC said it wants to understand what steps, if any, companies have taken to evaluate the safety of their chatbots when acting as companions, to limit the products’ use by and potential negative effects on children and teens, and to apprise users and parents of the risks associated with the chatbots.

    EDITOR’S NOTE — This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

    The move comes as a growing number of kids use AI chatbots for everything — from homework help to personal advice, emotional support and everyday decision-making. That’s despite research on the harms of chatbots, which have been shown to give kids dangerous advice about topics such as drugs, alcohol and eating disorders. The mother of a teenage boy in Florida who killed himself after developing what she described as an emotionally and sexually abusive relationship with a chatbot has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Character.AI. And the parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine recently sued OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman, alleging that ChatGPT coached the California boy in planning and taking his own life earlier this year.

    Character.AI said it is looking forward to “collaborating with the FTC on this inquiry and providing insight on the consumer AI industry and the space’s rapidly evolving technology.”

    “We have invested a tremendous amount of resources in Trust and Safety, especially for a startup. In the past year we’ve rolled out many substantive safety features, including an entirely new under-18 experience and a Parental Insights feature,” the company said. “We have prominent disclaimers in every chat to remind users that a Character is not a real person and that everything a Character says should be treated as fiction.”

    Meta declined to comment on the inquiry and Alphabet, Snap, OpenAI and X.AI did not immediately respond to messages for comment.

    OpenAI and Meta earlier this month announced changes to how their chatbots respond to teenagers asking questions about suicide or showing signs of mental and emotional distress. OpenAI said it is rolling out new controls enabling parents to link their accounts to their teen’s account.

    Parents can choose which features to disable and “receive notifications when the system detects their teen is in a moment of acute distress,” according to a company blog post that says the changes will go into effect this fall.

    Regardless of a user’s age, the company says its chatbots will attempt to redirect the most distressing conversations to more capable AI models that can provide a better response.

    Meta also said it is now blocking its chatbots from talking with teens about self-harm, suicide, disordered eating and inappropriate romantic conversations, and instead directs them to expert resources. Meta already offers parental controls on teen accounts.

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  • Day trip idea with a powerful twist!

    Inside: Local mom, Crystal, shares her family’s trip to visit two local historical plantation sites in one day: Rose Hill Plantation in Union, SC and Walnut Grove Plantation in Roebuck, SC.


    Looking for a powerful, educational day trip with your family? We visited two very different historical plantations in the Upstate—and we came away reflecting on how much American history can change depending on where you stand. These two sites tell very different stories, but both invite deep conversations, honest reflection, and a greater appreciation of the people whose lives shaped South Carolina.

    Here’s what you can expect if you’re planning a visit to Rose Hill Plantation in Union and Walnut Grove Plantation in Roebuck.

    Rose Hill Plantation: A Beautiful Place with a Heavy History

    Located in Union, SC, Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site was once home to William Henry Gist, the South Carolina governor who played a major role in leading the state to secede from the Union in 1860.

    Rose Plantation

    What You’ll Learn

    • Gist and his wife had 12 children, but tragically, only four lived to adulthood.
    • The tour does not shy away from the harsh truths. You’ll hear raw and honest stories about the lives of the more than 100 enslaved people who labored here.
    • Guides discuss how enslaved families endured unimaginable suffering, much of it undocumented.

    Even though the mansion and grounds are quiet and peaceful today, the history is deeply felt as you walk through the home and surrounding trails.

    Parent Tip: The mansion tour includes grim historical truths, so consider your children’s ages and readiness. Older kids and teens may benefit most from the depth of this tour.

    Walnut Grove Plantation: Revolutionary-Era Life & Patriot Stories

    A short drive away in Roebuck, SC, you’ll find Walnut Grove Plantation, once home to the Moore family, early settlers who supported the Patriot cause during the American Revolution.

    What You’ll See

    • The Moores raised 10 children here and ran a large farm—also built on the labor of enslaved people, though the number was fewer (around a dozen).
    • The site includes gardens, trails, and outbuildings you can explore, like the blacksmith shop and schoolhouse.
    • Walnut Grove focuses more on Revolutionary War-era stories, including militia musters and Loyalist raids.

    The main house is currently undergoing renovations, but there’s still plenty to experience outdoors. It’s a great place to walk, talk, and explore history from another time.

    Fun Fact for Kids: A young girl named Margaret Moore is said to have bravely stood up to a British soldier during a raid—a favorite local legend shared during tours!

    Why Visit Both?

    Seeing both plantations in one day gave our family a fuller, more honest picture of South Carolina’s past.

    • Rose Hill offers a deep dive into the Civil War era, with a heavy focus on slavery and secession.
    • Walnut Grove shares stories from the Revolutionary War, showing how even early American Patriots benefited from systems of forced labor.

    Together, they reveal how layered, complex, and often uncomfortable our history can be—but also how important it is to teach it truthfully.

    Planning Your Visits

    Can You Do Both in One Day?

    Yes! They’re only about 45 minutes apart by car. We recommend starting at Rose Hill (the longer and more emotionally intense tour), then taking a break for lunch before heading to Walnut Grove for an outdoor walk-and-learn experience.

    Good to Know:

    • Restrooms available at both sites
    • Stroller access is limited in historic buildings but fine on trails and grounds
    • Pack water and snacks, especially for younger kids
    • Admission fees may apply (check each site’s website before you go)

    Our visit to Rose Hill and Walnut Grove reminded us that learning history isn’t always easy—but it’s always worth it.

    These two plantations offer families a chance to reflect, ask questions, and connect with the past in a meaningful way.

    Walnut Grove

    Educational Adventures near Greenville SC

    crystaltaylor

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  • Federal agents seize more than 600K illegal vapes in nationwide crackdown

    Bensenville, Ill. — Federal agents carried out seizures nationwide of illegal vaping products Wednesday as the Trump administration moved to crack down on products that are regularly used by teens in the U.S. after being smuggled in from China.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. traveled to Illinois to tout the seizures, which included more than 600,000 illegal products taken from a distributor outside of Chicago.

    At a news conference on Wednesday, Bondi said hundreds of thousands of products were seized by federal agents, many smuggled into the U.S. from China.

    “They’re targeting children, young adults, students and even members of our military” Bondi said. “Make no mistake Chinese companies are making billions of dollars off of these products. They’re peddling them into our country.”

    It’s the latest attempt by law enforcement to staunch the flow of unauthorized vapes that have flooded into the U.S. in kid-friendly flavors, often from China. Their influx has forced the FDA to try to eliminate thousands of illegal products sold by under-the-radar importers and distributors.

    Agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Marshals Service also seized illegal products from distributors and retailers in North Carolina, Arizona, New Jersey, Georgia and Florida, federal officials said.

    The Justice Department also filed civil actions Wednesday seeking to halt illegal business practices happening at five distributors and five retailers, officials said. That follows undercover buys of illegal products that ATF agents carried out at distributors across the country last month, according to authorities.

    Standing in front of a warehouse where products were seized, she said the Justice Department would also not rule out bringing criminal charges, if warranted.

    Vaping among teens skyrocketed in 2019, when more than a quarter reported using vapes daily. But use has declined in recent years with fewer adolescents reported vaping in 2024 than at any point in the last decade. Officials attributed that drop in part to more aggressive enforcement against retailers and manufacturers.

    The Vapor Technology Association blasted the FDA and federal officials, arguing the actions threaten to bankrupt thousands of small businesses, cost tens of thousands of jobs, and erase billions in tax revenue. The group’s executive director, Tony Abboud, called the seizures “an assault on American workers, small businesses, and the tax base” and urged regulators to reverse course.

    ___

    Associated Press journalists Amanda Seitz and Matthew Perrone in Washington contributed to this report.

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  • New Hampshire boy, 13, reels in 177-pound halibut while deep-sea fishing that may be a world record

    HAMPTON, N.H. — A New Hampshire teenager on a deep-sea fishing trip this week hauled in a 177-pound (80 kilogram) Atlantic halibut, a fish so big that it weighed more than him and could be a world record.

    Jackson Denio, a 13-year-old from Hampton, New Hampshire, was fishing about 100 miles (161 kilometers) off the New England Coast on Cashes Ledge Monday morning when he caught the fish.

    “I think I screamed, honestly,” said Denio, who weighs around 120 pounds and is 5-foot-9-inches. “I don’t know exactly what happened, but I was very excited.”

    Denio had set out on Sunday with about 30 others on an overnight charter trip with Al Gauron’s Deep Sea Fishing and Whale Watching. After everyone had caught plenty of pollock and other fish, Denio told the crew he wanted to catch a shark. They told him to fish at the bottom.

    Minutes after he dropped his hook with pollock on it, Denio got a hit and knew he had something big.

    Denio fought the fish for about 30 minutes, bringing it near the boat only to have it dive back down. He was eventually able to get the fish to the surface, guided by the crew and cheered on by fellow passengers who uttered plenty of oohs and ahhs spiced with profanity as the size of the fish became clear. One person even yelled out “Jackson, you are an angel of a man.”

    “I’m standing there watching him. Then all of a sudden the fish took off it, bit it and started pounding away,” said Jim Walsh, the captain of the vessel that Denio was on. “I looked at him and I said, were you on the bottom? And he goes, yes. And I said, you don’t have a shark.”

    Walsh said he was most impressed with Denio’s composure.

    “He did not let go once. He never let anybody else touch the rod. And he worked him, worked him. Then eventually, the fish starts to tire out,” Walsh said. “Even though he’s that big, they go to tire. Then he got it up to the surface. That’s when we looked and went Oh my God. We were all ecstatic.”

    Before the fish was carved up, Denio officially got it weighed and took photos and video of the fish, and he has provided other information about his fishing gear that will go into an application for a world record with the International Game Fish Association. The family plans to file an application under the junior record for Atlantic halibut and one under line class that includes all fish.

    The association didn’t respond to a request for more information. Its website lists as vacant the record for Atlantic halibut under the junior male class.

    And while he is relishing all the attention, Denio is itching get back out on the water again — and catch something even bigger.

    “It makes me want to keep fishing even more and try and beat the record if I can,” he said.

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  • OpenAI and Meta say they’re fixing AI chatbots to better respond to teens in distress

    SAN FRANCISCO — Artificial intelligence chatbot makers OpenAI and Meta say they are adjusting how their chatbots respond to teenagers and other users asking questions about suicide or showing signs of mental and emotional distress.

    OpenAI, maker of ChatGPT, said Tuesday it is preparing to roll out new controls enabling parents to link their accounts to their teen’s account.

    Parents can choose which features to disable and “receive notifications when the system detects their teen is in a moment of acute distress,” according to a company blog post that says the changes will go into effect this fall.

    Regardless of a user’s age, the company says its chatbots will redirect the most distressing conversations to more capable AI models that can provide a better response.

    EDITOR’S NOTE — This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

    The announcement comes a week after the parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine sued OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman, alleging that ChatGPT coached the California boy in planning and taking his own life earlier this year.

    Meta, the parent company of Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp, also said it is now blocking its chatbots from talking with teens about self-harm, suicide, disordered eating and inappropriate romantic conversations, and instead directs them to expert resources. Meta already offers parental controls on teen accounts.

    A study published last week in the medical journal Psychiatric Services found inconsistencies in how three popular artificial intelligence chatbots responded to queries about suicide.

    The study by researchers at the RAND Corporation found a need for “further refinement” in ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini and Anthropic’s Claude. The researchers did not study Meta’s chatbots.

    The study’s lead author, Ryan McBain, said Tuesday that “it’s encouraging to see OpenAI and Meta introducing features like parental controls and routing sensitive conversations to more capable models, but these are incremental steps.”

    “Without independent safety benchmarks, clinical testing, and enforceable standards, we’re still relying on companies to self-regulate in a space where the risks for teenagers are uniquely high,” said McBain, a senior policy researcher at RAND.

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  • Road rage shooting of pregnant 17-year-old in Louisiana sparks outrage from officials

    BATON ROUGE, La. — Louisiana officials are expressing indignation over a road rage shooting that killed a pregnant teenager and caused her baby to be delivered early.

    Katelynn Strate, 17, was a passenger in the car and seven months pregnant when she was struck in the head by a bullet fired by a driver in another vehicle on Sunday, the Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff’s Office said.

    Strate was taken to a hospital and placed on life support, the sheriff’s office said in a statement Monday. Her baby was delivered by emergency cesarean section and was “doing well” in a neonatal intensive care unit, according to the statement.

    “This is terrible. This poor infant is fighting for their life in the NICU while his or her mother is on life support. All because of road rage? There is no excuse,” Attorney General Liz Murrill posted on the social platform X on Tuesday.

    The sheriff’s office later wrote in a post on Facebook that Strate had “officially become a donor hero.”

    Law enforcement said a man driving a silver truck and the driver of the SUV the teenager was riding in were tailgating and “brake-checking” each other around 9 a.m. Sunday in Ponchatoula, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of New Orleans.

    Authorities said the truck’s driver, Barry West, 54, shot one round into the SUV when it was in front of his vehicle. Police said he believed the occupants of the SUV had shot at him first, but evidence showed no shots were fired from the SUV and no weapon was found inside, the sheriff’s office said.

    West was charged with one count of second-degree murder, three counts of attempted second-degree murder, illegal use of a weapon and obstruction of justice.

    The Associated Press could not immediately identify an attorney who could comment on West’s behalf.

    “This is a senseless tragedy on Sunday morning with no logical reason for this family to be experiencing this heartbreak right now,” said Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff Gerald Sticker.

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  • Aurora motorcycle crash claims 2 teen lives

    AURORA, Colo. — A high-speed collision between a Suzuki motorcycle and an Acura SUV in Aurora on Friday afternoon left a 17-year-old girl and an 18-year-old man dead at the scene, according to Aurora police.

    The Aurora Police Department (APD) said the crash happened around 3:30 p.m. on E. Arapahoe Road and E. Peakview Drive.

    An investigation revealed that the 18-year-old man was driving the bike at a high rate of speed eastbound on E. Arapahoe Road and crashed into a westbound SUV making a left turn from E. Arapahoe Road onto E. Temple Court.

    His 17-year-old passenger was also killed in the crash.

    The driver of the SUV, who was the sole occupant, was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

    APD’s Traffic Investigations Unit was dispatched to the scene. The intersection was closed for several hours for the investigation and was reopened around 9:43 p.m.

    The identities of the two victims have not been released. However, one victim is believed to have attended Grandview High School.

    It’s not clear if any citations were issued.

    Coloradans making a difference | Denver7 featured videos


    Denver7 is committed to making a difference in our community by standing up for what’s right, listening, lending a helping hand and following through on promises. See that work in action, in the videos above.

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  • A 14-year-old’s suicide was prompted by an AI chatbot, lawsuit alleges. Here’s how parents can keep kids safe.

    A 14-year-old’s suicide was prompted by an AI chatbot, lawsuit alleges. Here’s how parents can keep kids safe.

    The mother of a 14-year-old Florida boy is suing an AI chatbot company after her son, Sewell Setzer III, died by suicide—something she claims was driven by his relationship with an AI bot. 

    “Megan Garcia seeks to prevent C.AI from doing to any other child what it did to hers,” reads the 93-page wrongful-death lawsuit that was filed this week in a U.S. District Court in Orlando against Character.AI, its founders, and Google.

    Tech Justice Law Project director Meetali Jain, who is representing Garcia, said in a press release about the case: “By now we’re all familiar with the dangers posed by unregulated platforms developed by unscrupulous tech companies—especially for kids. But the harms revealed in this case are new, novel, and, honestly, terrifying. In the case of Character.AI, the deception is by design, and the platform itself is the predator.”

    Character.AI released a statement via X, noting, “We are heartbroken by the tragic loss of one of our users and want to express our deepest condolences to the family. As a company, we take the safety of our users very seriously and we are continuing to add new safety features that you can read about here: https://blog.character.ai/community-safety-updates/….”

    In the suit, Garcia alleges that Sewell, who took his life in February, was drawn into an addictive, harmful technology with no protections in place, leading to an extreme personality shift in the boy, who appeared to prefer the bot over other real-life connections. His mom alleges that “abusive and sexual interactions” took place over a 10-month period. The boy committed suicide after the bot told him, “Please come home to me as soon as possible, my love.”

    On Friday, New York Times reporter Kevin Roose discussed the situation on his Hard Fork podcast, playing a clip of an interview he did with Garcia for his article that told her story. Garcia did not learn about the full extent of the bot relationship until after her son’s death, when she saw all the messages. In fact, she told Roose, when she noticed Sewell was often getting sucked into his phone, she asked what he was doing and who he was talking to. He explained it was “‘just an AI bot…not a person,’” she recalled, adding, “I felt relieved, like, OK, it’s not a person, it’s like one of his little games.” Garcia did not fully understand the potential emotional power of a bot—and she is far from alone. 

    “This is on nobody’s radar,” Robbie Torney, program manager, AI, at Common Sense Media and lead author of a new guide on AI companions aimed at parents—who are grappling, constantly, to keep up with confusing new technology and to create boundaries for their kids’ safety. 

    But AI companions, Torney stresses, differ from, say, a service desk chat bot that you use when you’re trying to get help from a bank. “They’re designed to do tasks or respond to requests,” he explains. “Something like character AI is what we call a companion, and is designed to try to form a relationship, or to simulate a relationship, with a user. And that’s a very different use case that I think we need parents to be aware of.” That’s apparent in Garcia’s lawsuit, which includes chillingly flirty, sexual, realistic text exchanges between her son and the bot. 

    Sounding the alarm over AI companions is especially important for parents of teens, Torney says, as teens—and particularly male teens—are especially susceptible to over reliance on technology. 

    Below, what parents need to know.  

    What are AI companions and why do kids use them?

    According to the new Parents’ Ultimate Guide to AI Companions and Relationships from Common Sense Media, created in conjunction with the mental health professionals of the Stanford Brainstorm Lab, AI companions are “a new category of technology that goes beyond simple chatbots.” They are specifically designed to, among other things, “simulate emotional bonds and close relationships with users, remember personal details from past conversations, role-play as mentors and friends, mimic human emotion and empathy, and “agree more readily with the user than typical AI chatbots,” according to the guide. 

    Popular platforms include not only Character.ai, which allows its more than 20 million users to create and then chat with text-based companions; Replika, which offers text-based or animated 3D companions for friendship or romance; and others including Kindroid and Nomi.

    Kids are drawn to them for an array of reasons, from non-judgmental listening and round-the-clock availability to emotional support and escape from real-world social pressures. 

    Who’s at risk and what are the concerns?

    Those most at risk, warns Common Sense Media, are teenagers—especially those with “depression, anxiety, social challenges, or isolation”—as well as males, young people going through big life changes, and anyone lacking support systems in the real world. 

    That last point has been particularly troubling to Raffaele Ciriello, a senior lecturer in Business Information Systems at the University of Sydney Business School, who has researched how “emotional” AI is posing a challenge to the human essence. “Our research uncovers a (de)humanization paradox: by humanizing AI agents, we may inadvertently dehumanize ourselves, leading to an ontological blurring in human-AI interactions.” In other words, Ciriello writes in a recent opinion piece for The Conversation with PhD student Angelina Ying Chen, “Users may become deeply emotionally invested if they believe their AI companion truly understands them.”

    Another study, this one out of the University of Cambridge and focusing on kids, found that AI chatbots have an “empathy gap” that puts young users, who tend to treat such companions as “lifelike, quasi-human confidantes,” at particular risk of harm.

    Because of that, Common Sense Media highlights a list of potential risks, including that the companions can be used to avoid real human relationships, may pose particular problems for people with mental or behavioral challenges, may intensify loneliness or isolation, bring the potential for inappropriate sexual content, could become addictive, and tend to agree with users—a frightening reality for those experiencing “suicidality, psychosis, or mania.” 

    How to spot red flags 

    Parents should look for the following warning signs, according to the guide:

    • Preferring AI companion interaction to real friendships
    • Spending hours alone talking to the companion
    • Emotional distress when unable to access the companion
    • Sharing deeply personal information or secrets
    • Developing romantic feelings for the AI companion
    • Declining grades or school participation
    • Withdrawal from social/family activities and friendships
    • Loss of interest in previous hobbies
    • Changes in sleep patterns
    • Discussing problems exclusively with the AI companion

    Consider getting professional help for your child, stresses Common Sense Media, if you notice them withdrawing from real people in favor of the AI, showing new or worsening signs of depression or anxiety, becoming overly defensive about AI companion use, showing major changes in behavior or mood, or expressing thoughts of self-harm. 

    How to keep your child safe

    • Set boundaries: Set specific times for AI companion use and don’t allow unsupervised or unlimited access. 
    • Spend time offline: Encourage real-world friendships and activities.
    • Check in regularly: Monitor the content from the chatbot, as well as your child’s level of emotional attachment.
    • Talk about it: Keep communication open and judgment-free about experiences with AI, while keeping an eye out for red flags.

    “If parents hear their kids saying, ‘Hey, I’m talking to a chat bot AI,’ that’s really an opportunity to lean in and take that information—and not think, ‘Oh, okay, you’re not talking to a person,” says Torney. Instead, he says, it’s a chance to find out more and assess the situation and keep alert. “Try to listen from a place of compassion and empathy and not to think that just because it’s not a person that it’s safer,” he says, “or that you don’t need to worry.”

    If you need immediate mental health support, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

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    Beth Greenfield

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