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  • Advocacy groups urge parents to avoid AI toys this holiday season

    Advocacy groups urge parents to avoid AI toys this holiday season

    They’re cute, even cuddly, and promise learning and companionship — but artificial intelligence toys are not safe for kids, according to children’s and consumer advocacy groups urging parents not to buy them during the holiday season.

    These toys, marketed to kids as young as 2 years old, are generally powered by AI models that have already been shown to harm children and teenagers, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, according to an advisory published Thursday by the children’s advocacy group Fairplay and signed by more than 150 organizations and individual experts such as child psychiatrists and educators.

    “The serious harms that AI chatbots have inflicted on children are well-documented, including fostering obsessive use, having explicit sexual conversations, and encouraging unsafe behaviors, violence against others, and self-harm,” Fairplay said.

    AI toys, made by companies such as Curio Interactive and Keyi Technologies, are often marketed as educational, but Fairplay says they can displace important creative and learning activities. They promise friendship but also disrupt children’s relationships and resilience, the group said.

    “What’s different about young children is that their brains are being wired for the first time and developmentally it is natural for them to be trustful, for them to seek relationships with kind and friendly characters,” said Rachel Franz, director of Fairplay’s Young Children Thrive Offline Program. Because of this, she added, the amount of trust young children are putting in these toys can exacerbate the harms seen with older children.

    Fairplay, a 25-year-old organization formerly known as the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, has been warning about AI toys for years. They just weren’t as advanced as they are today. A decade ago, during an emerging fad of internet-connected toys and AI speech recognition, the group helped lead a backlash against Mattel’s talking Hello Barbie doll that it said was recording and analyzing children’s conversations.

    This time, though AI toys are mostly sold online and more popular in Asia than elsewhere, Franz said some have started to appear on store shelves in the U.S. and more could be on the way.

    “Everything has been released with no regulation and no research, so it gives us extra pause when all of a sudden we see more and more manufacturers, including Mattel, who recently partnered with OpenAI, potentially putting out these products,” Franz said.

    It’s the second big seasonal warning against AI toys since consumer advocates at U.S. PIRG last week called out the trend in its annual “ Trouble in Toyland ” report that typically looks at a range of product hazards, such as high-powered magnets and button-sized batteries that young children can swallow. This year, the organization tested four toys that use AI chatbots.

    “We found some of these toys will talk in-depth about sexually explicit topics, will offer advice on where a child can find matches or knives, act dismayed when you say you have to leave, and have limited or no parental controls,” the report said. One of the toys, a teddy bear made by Singapore-based FoloToy, was later withdrawn, its CEO told CNN this week.

    Dr. Dana Suskind, a pediatric surgeon and social scientist who studies early brain development, said young children don’t have the conceptual tools to understand what an AI companion is. While kids have always bonded with toys through imaginative play, when they do this they use their imagination to create both sides of a pretend conversation, “practicing creativity, language, and problem-solving,” she said.

    “An AI toy collapses that work. It answers instantly, smoothly, and often better than a human would. We don’t yet know the developmental consequences of outsourcing that imaginative labor to an artificial agen — but it’s very plausible that it undercuts the kind of creativity and executive function that traditional pretend play builds,” Suskind said.

    Beijing-based Keyi, maker of an AI “petbot” called Loona, didn’t return requests for comment this week, but other AI toymakers sought to highlight their child safety protections.

    California-based Curio Interactive makes stuffed toys, like Gabbo and rocket-shaped Grok, that have been promoted by the pop singer Grimes. The company said it has “meticulously designed” guardrails to protect children and the company encourages parents to “monitor conversations, track insights, and choose the controls that work best for their family.”

    In response to the earlier PIRG findings, Curio said it is “actively working with our team to address any concerns, while continuously overseeing content and interactions to ensure a safe and enjoyable experience for children.”

    Another company, Miko, based in Mumbai, India, said it uses its own conversational AI model rather than relying on general large language model systems such as ChatGPT in order to make its product — an interactive AI robot — safe for children.

    “We are always expanding our internal testing, strengthening our filters, and introducing new capabilities that detect and block sensitive or unexpected topics,” said CEO Sneh Vaswani. “These new features complement our existing controls that allow parents and caregivers to identify specific topics they’d like to restrict from conversation. We will continue to invest in setting the highest standards for safe, secure and responsible AI integration for Miko products.”

    Miko’s products are sold by major retailers such as Walmart and Costco and have been promoted by the families of social media “kidfluencers” whose YouTube videos have millions of views. On its website, it markets its robots as “Artificial Intelligence. Genuine friendship.”

    Ritvik Sharma, the company’s senior vice president of growth, said Miko actually “encourages kids to interact more with their friends, to interact more with the peers, with the family members etc. It’s not made for them to feel attached to the device only.”

    Still, Suskind and children’s advocates say analog toys are a better bet for the holidays.

    “Kids need lots of real human interaction. Play should support that, not take its place. The biggest thing to consider isn’t only what the toy does; it’s what it replaces. A simple block set or a teddy bear that doesn’t talk back forces a child to invent stories, experiment, and work through problems. AI toys often do that thinking for them,” she said. “Here’s the brutal irony: when parents ask me how to prepare their child for an AI world, unlimited AI access is actually the worst preparation possible.”

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  • JF-17 draws ‘significant attention’ at Dubai Airshow; friendly country signs MOU for procurement of jet – Dawn

    1. JF-17 draws ‘significant attention’ at Dubai Airshow; friendly country signs MOU for procurement of jet  Dawn
    2. Pakistan’s JF-17 Thunder fighter jet draws crowd at Dubai Airshow 2025  Gulf News
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  • A surfer from humble beginnings with a heart of gold

    A surfer from humble beginnings with a heart of gold

    A childhood on a surfboard

    Williams caught his first wave when he was six months old, riding with his father, and has not stopped since.

    “I’ve stuck with surfing because I love it, because it’s what I wanted to do the most,” Williams said….

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  • A “surfer” seconds after his birth, Sebastian Williams keeping family tradition alive as new father

    A “surfer” seconds after his birth, Sebastian Williams keeping family tradition alive as new father

    A childhood on a surfboard

    Williams caught his first wave when he was six months old, riding with his father, and has not stopped since.

    “I’ve stuck with surfing because I love it, because it’s what I wanted to do the most,” Williams said….

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  • Scientists capture genome’s structure in unprecedented detail

    Scientists capture genome’s structure in unprecedented detail

    Using a new technique called MCC ultra, the team, including researchers from the University of Cambridge, mapped the human genome down to a single base pair, unlocking how genes are controlled, or, how the body decides which genes to turn on or…

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  • Two new Two MICHELIN Stars shine in the italy guide 2026 – Groupe Michelin

    1. Two new Two MICHELIN Stars shine in the italy guide 2026  Groupe Michelin
    2. Great flavours, modest prices: 137 restaurants earn the 2026 Bib Gourmand  Nation Thailand
    3. Italy Gets 25 New Michelin-Starred Restaurants For 2026  Forbes
    4. Italy: 15…

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  • Nintendo Black Friday deals: Switch 2 bundles, discounted Switch games and accessories are available for holiday shopping now – Engadget

    1. Nintendo Black Friday deals: Switch 2 bundles, discounted Switch games and accessories are available for holiday shopping now  Engadget
    2. Black Friday Week: The Best Nintendo Switch & Switch 2 Deals So Far  Nintendo Wire
    3. Save up to 85% on Spike…

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  • Macaque survives over a year after pig kidney transplant in China-Xinhua

    WUHAN, Nov. 20 (Xinhua) — Chinese scientists have announced a major breakthrough in the field of xenotransplantation, reporting that a gene-edited pig kidney has been functioning successfully in a macaque for over a year.

    The achievement…

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  • New Citizen Science Proposals Funded in 2025

    New Citizen Science Proposals Funded in 2025

    NASA has selected 10 new citizen science proposals for funding in 2025. These selections provide a preview of what’s coming next for NASA citizen science. Note that these investigations are research grants: some of them will result in new…

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  • Asda to raise £568m in store sell-off as sales continue to fall | Asda

    Asda to raise £568m in store sell-off as sales continue to fall | Asda

    Asda is selling off 24 stores and a distribution centre – and leasing them back – to raise £568m in what has been called a “sign of weakness” as sales continue to fall.

    The Leeds-based supermarket group, which is expected to release its quarterly results next week, has continued to lose market share to rivals as sales have gone backwards, despite an effort to win over shoppers with price cuts and improved stores.

    Sales fell 3.9% in the three months to 2 November, according to data from Worldpanel by Numerator (formerly Kantar), which indicated a one percentage point drop in market share from a year before.

    Asda’s parent group slumped to a near-£600m loss last year as sales fell and the cost of servicing its debt pile increased.

    Clive Black, a retail analyst at Shore Capital, said: “From the outside it looks like a sign of weakness that tangible fixed assets are being sold at this time.”

    He said the deal might help Asda to pay off debt or allow more capital to invest in the business but would also mean higher rents, meaning less cash for day-to-day operations.

    “If trading was hunky dory, that can be accommodated in the big scheme of things, but that is not the case. We had expected a more stable trading position from Asda by now,” Black said. “Recent market share data has been very poor for grocery. It all feels rather tight.”

    Patrick O’Brien, an analyst at GlobalData, said Asda’s promise in March under its new chair, Allan Leighton, to stir up the market with a barrage of price cuts, did not appear to have hit home.

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    “There was a feeling that Asda were really going to bring out the big guns and we haven’t really seen that materialise,” he said. “We have not seen that aggressiveness on price as yet.”

    Nadine Houghton, a national officer for the GMB union, which represents thousands of the retailer’s workers, said there were concerns about Asda’s future in the light of the latest lease-back deal: “Asda’s owners, TDR Capital, is selling off yet more assets to settle the debt liabilities heaped on the business by its own borrowing. Debt is up, lease liabilities are up, interest payments are up – but market share and staff morale are rock bottom.”

    Asda, which has 579 supermarkets, 517 Express convenience stores and 29 Asda Living general merchandise and fashion outlets in total, said it would continue to operate from the latest batch of stores to be sold off. They have gone to two buyers: DTZ Investors and Blue Owl Capital.

    The deal is part of plan to cut hefty debts at Asda since a highly leveraged £6.8bn takeover in 2020 by the billionaire Issa brothers and the private equity firm TDR Capital. TDR now controls the group after buying out one of the brothers, Zuber Issa, while Mohsin Issa retains a 22% stake.

    Armarveer Singh, a credit analyst at CreditSights, said the deal would negatively affect Asda’s credit rating as it would increase leasehold exposure while the proceeds of the sale and leaseback would not be used for investment or cutting the group’s main debts. Bonds fell as it emerged that the money is to be used to pay off a debt to Walmart, the US retailer that previously owned Asda and retains a 10% stake, as first reported by the Financial Times.

    Asda previously sold most of its warehouses for £1.7bn in 2021, and 25 supermarkets for £650m two years later, in similar deals in which it agreed to lease back the properties. It also signed a more unusual ground rent deal for £300m in 2023.

    An Asda spokesperson said: “Asda’s property strategy is centred on maintaining a strong freehold base while also taking a considered and selective approach to unlocking value from our estate where appropriate. These transactions reflect that approach, enabling us to realise value from the sites while retaining full operational control.”

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