Generation Generative: Raising Kids with AI “Friends” in a World of Data Extraction and Bias
Generation Generative: Raising Kids with AI “Friends” in a World of Data Extraction and Bias  
Podcast: The People's AI: The Decentralized AI Podcast
Published On: Wed Jan 07 2026
Description: What happens when a “kid-friendly” AI bedtime story turns racy—inside your own car?In this episode of The People’s AI (presented by the Vana Foundation), we explore “Generation Generative”: how kids are already using AI, what the biggest risks really are (from inappropriate content to emotional manipulation), and what practical parenting looks like when the tech is everywhere—from smart speakers to AI companions.We hear from Dr. Mhairi Aitken (The Alan Turing Institute) on why children’s voices are largely missing from AI governance, Dr. Sonia Tiwari on smart toys and early-childhood AI characters, and Dr. Michael Robb (Common Sense Media) on what his research is finding about teens and AI companions—plus a grounded, parent-focused conversation with journalist (and parent) Kate Morgan.TakeawaysKids often understand AI faster—and more ethically—than adults assume (especially around fairness and bias).The “AI companion” category is different from general chatbots: it’s designed to feel personal, and that can be emotionally sticky (and potentially manipulative).Guardrails are inconsistent, age assurance is weak, and “safe by default” still isn’t a safe assumption.The long game isn’t just content risk—it’s intimacy + data: systems that learn a child’s inner life over years may shape identity, relationships, and worldview.Parents don’t need perfection—but they do need ongoing, low-drama conversations and some shared rules.Guests Dr. Michael Robb — Head of Research, Common Sensehttps://www.commonsensemedia.org/bio/michael-robbDr. Sonia Tiwari — Children’s Media Researcherhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/soniastic/Dr. Mhairi Aitken — Senior Ethics Fellow, The Alan Turing Institutehttps://www.turing.ac.uk/people/research-fellows/mhairi-aitkenKate Morgan — JournalistPresented by the Vana FoundationVana supports a new internet rooted in data sovereignty and user ownership—so individuals (not corporations) can govern their data and share in the value it creates. Learn more at vana.org.