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YouTube is rife with AI-generated “educational” videos targeting children, and many of the lessons they’re imparting — if there’s a discernible message at all — could be harming their development.
Disturbing new reporting from The 74 and Mother Jones found numerous examples of AI-generated videos either peddling absolute nonsense or damaging lessons to their young intended audience.
In one video that’s supposed to be a nursery rhyme about cars, children ride without a seatbelt and walk in the middle of a road with moving cars behind them.
Another AI-generated sing-a-long video about the US’s 50 states shows garbled state names that don’t match up with the vocals, as kids are asked to learn about “Ribio Island,” “Conmecticut,” “Oklolodia,” and “Louggisslia.”
Carla Engelbrecht, who’s worked for children’s media brands like Sesame Street and PBS Kids, found other child-targeted AI videos showing a baby swallowing whole grapes, which is a choking hazard, or eating honey, which can kill infants. Another showed a baby eating an apple that oozed blood.
It’s not hard to see how the videos could be dangerous. Kids might pick up the idea that it’s okay to eat a dangerous snack, or wander into the road. And the videos are being cranked out at a whirlwind pace, while parents are increasingly relying on using platforms like YouTube to keep their kids entertained.
“We’re at the beginning of a monster problem, and we have to get hold of it quickly,” Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Temple University, told The 74.
“This is not neutral content,” echoed Dana Suskind, a professor of surgery and pediatrics at the University of Chicago. “I think of this as toddler AI misinformation at an industrial scale. It’s very risky for the developing brain.”
Right now, it’s the exact scope is hard to pin down. But a report from video-editing platform Kapwing cited by The 74 estimated that 21 percent of YouTube’s feed is now filled with shoddy AI content. The channel behind the AI nursery song about cars has uploaded more than 10,000 videos since its first upload around seven months ago, averaging about 50 new videos per day.
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