Key Takeaways
Teen users will be directed to a stricter version of ChatGPT
New parental controls will allow account linking and blackout hours
The move comes as regulators double down on chatbot risks for children
OpenAI GPT-4o is displayed on smartphone.
Teen users will be directed to a stricter version of ChatGPT
New parental controls will allow account linking and blackout hours
The move comes as regulators double down on chatbot risks for children
THURSDAY, Sept. 18, 2025 (HealthDay News) — Teenagers chatting with ChatGPT will soon see a very different version of the tool — one built with stricter ways to keep them safe online, OpenAI announced.
The new safeguards come as regulators increase scrutiny of chatbots and their impact on young people’s mental health.
Under the change, anyone identified as under 18 will automatically be directed to a different version of ChatGPT designed with "age-appropriate" content rules, the company said in a statement.
The teen version blocks sexual content and can involve law enforcement in rare cases where a user is in acute distress.
"The way ChatGPT responds to a 15-year-old should look different than the way it responds to an adult," the company explained.
OpenAI also plans to roll out parental controls by the end of September. Parents will be able to link accounts, view chat history and even set blackout hours to limit use.
The announcement follows the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) investigation into the potential risks of AI chatbots for children and teens.Â
In April, 16-year-old Adam Raine of California died by suicide; his family has sued OpenAI, claiming ChatGPT played a role in his death, CBS News reported.
While OpenAI says it is prioritizing safety, questions still remain about how the system will verify a user’s age. If the platform cannot confirm a user’s age, it will default to the teen version, the company said.
Other tech giants have announced similar steps. YouTube, for example, has introduced new age-estimation technology that factors in account history and viewing habits, CBS News said.
Parents remain concerned.
A Pew Research Center report released earlier this year found 44% of parents who worry about teen mental health believe social media has the biggest negative impact.
More information
HealthyChildren.org has more on how AI chatbots can affect kids.
SOURCE: CBS News, Sept. 16, 2025
Parents should be aware that ChatGPT will soon offer new tools to help monitor and limit teens' use.
Originally published on healthday.com, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.
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