Family · the conversation
When a kid sees an AI image
30-second gist~30s read
Kids see AI-generated images all the time on YouTube, TikTok, and in their feeds — beautiful landscapes, "cute animals", impossible scenes. Most of it is harmless. Some of it teaches them that "looks real" means "is real" — a habit that gets dangerous fast.
One short conversation fixes a lot of this. They handle it better than adults usually expect.
If you want more
The conversation, in three sentences
1. "These pictures aren't drawn or photographed — a computer made them up to match a sentence." (Show them. Generate one in front of them — most kids find this fascinating.)
2. "Sometimes they look so real you can't tell the difference. That's not a problem when it's a unicorn. It's a problem when someone uses it to lie about a real person."
3. "If you ever see a picture of someone doing something that doesn't sound right, don't share it. Tell me. We'll look it up together."
What kids understand surprisingly fast
That a thing can be real-looking and made-up. (They've already learned this from cartoons and Photoshop.) That images can lie. (They've already seen filters.) That AI is a tool, not a person. (They get this much faster than adults.) The thing they often don't get without you saying it: that other people might still believe a fake image, even when they wouldn't.