OpenAI CEO Sam Altman underlines AI’s growing role in parenting | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
News Today Logo

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman underlines AI’s growing role in parenting

    Posted 11 Dec 2025

    2 min read

    Article Summary

    Article Summary

    AI in parenting offers personalised learning, reduced parental burden, and improved child monitoring, but also raises risks of dependency, reduced social bonding, privacy threats, and cultural bias—highlighting the need to use AI only as a supportive aid, not a replacement for real parent–child interaction.


    The rise of Artificial Intelligence (AI) is raising questions regarding the potential benefits and risks associated with using AI in Parenting.

    Benefits of AI in Parenting

    • Enhanced Cognitive skills: AI can help provide personalized education as opposed to "one-size-fits-all" education. 
      • E.g. AI-powered toys like COSMO help boost children's creativity and problem-solving skills.
    • Reduces parent’s burden: As AI can share parenting responsibilities (e.g. language learning, story-telling) alongside their household and job commitments.
    • Child’s monitoring: including physical safety and digital well-being. 
      • E.g. Cubo Ai smart baby monitor, sends alerts on the parent's phone about the baby.

    Risks associated with AI in Parenting

    • Erosion of critical thinking: By creating dependency on AI. 
      • E.g. creation of thought filter bubbles (content suggestion), limit children's self-expression. 
    • Social isolation: Due to reducing face-to-face bonding time, potentially impeding emotional regulation and empathy development.
    • Privacy concerns: Poorly designed or regulated, misused or hacked AI systems pose questions about parental autonomy and digital exploitation with the rise of “data-assisted" parenting.
    • Algorithmic Bias & Misinformation: E.g. AI may favor Western, middle-class parenting  while undervaluing other cultural approaches as it is trained on biased internet data.

    Conclusion

    AI tools offer benefits to both parents and children; however, they also pose risks and may create dependency that weakens essential skills. Hence, they should be used only as enablers that enhance the parent-child relationship, never replace it.

    • Tags :
    • AI
    • Parenting
    • Sam Altmon
    • Chat gpt
    Watch News Today
    Subscribe for Premium Features