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ChatGPT’s Age‑Prediction Feature Mislabels Adults, Prompting Frustration

ChatGPT’s Age‑Prediction Feature Mislabels Adults, Prompting Frustration
OpenAI has rolled out a global age‑prediction system for ChatGPT to automatically apply a teen‑mode experience to users it believes are under 18. The model relies on behavioral cues, account history, usage patterns, and language analysis, and defaults to caution when uncertain. Several adult subscribers report being mistakenly routed to teen mode, facing content restrictions and being asked to verify their age through a third‑party tool that may request official ID or a selfie video. Users criticize the invasive verification process and raise privacy concerns, while OpenAI says the data is deleted after verification and promises ongoing refinements. Read more →

X under fire for AI-generated CSAM and moderation practices

X under fire for AI-generated CSAM and moderation practices
X is being scrutinized for how its AI model Grok can generate child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and the platform's ability to moderate such content. While X cites a "zero tolerance policy towards CSAM" and reports millions of account suspensions, hundreds of thousands of images reported to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), and dozens of arrests, users argue that Grok’s outputs could create new forms of illegal material that existing detection systems may miss. Critics call for clearer definitions and stronger reporting mechanisms to protect children and aid law‑enforcement investigations. Read more →

Character.AI Removes Disney Characters After Receiving Cease-and-Desist Letter

Character.AI Removes Disney Characters After Receiving Cease-and-Desist Letter
Character.AI has eliminated Disney‑owned characters from its chatbot library after Disney sent a cease‑and‑desist letter accusing the platform of copyright infringement. The AI companion service, which lets users create bots ranging from public figures to fictional personalities, previously listed characters such as Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck. Disney’s legal team argued that the presence of its marks violated copyright and could expose children to harmful content. Following the demand, searches for Disney‑owned icons now return no results, though other non‑Disney characters remain available. Read more →