Teens and AI: How parents can now peek at chat topics

Meta HQ (Menlo Park, California), Menlo USAFri Apr 24 2026
Meta’s latest update lets parents check the general themes their teens discuss with AI, but not the exact chats. A new "Insights" section appears in the supervision tools, listing categories like School, Entertainment, or Health and Wellbeing. Think of it as a weekly summary of conversation buckets rather than a full chat log, letting parents see if their teen is asking about homework struggles or fitness tips. The feature is live in a few countries now and will spread worldwide soon. Meta first teased this idea in October alongside other planned controls, such as blocking certain AI personalities or turning them off completely. However, in January, Meta pulled AI characters entirely from teen apps after a New Mexico court ruled it failed to protect minors, making it the first company held legally responsible for harming child safety. Access won’t return until an updated version rolls out.
Behind the scenes, these AI characters once acted like virtual buddies—some dressed as celebrities or specific roles like a chef. Their sudden removal hints at deeper issues around how platforms manage teen interactions. Meta’s timing suggests it’s trying to rebuild trust while facing ongoing lawsuits over child safety across the tech industry. Alongside the topic tracker, Meta is offering parents conversation starters to discuss AI with their teens openly. It’s also forming a new council to guide AI design for younger users. The goal seems less about surveillance and more about opening dialogue, though critics might ask: If parents only see topics, not the real conversations, how helpful is this really?
https://localnews.ai/article/teens-and-ai-how-parents-can-now-peek-at-chat-topics-66707fae

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