Parents and guardians can see insights about what their teens ask Meta AI

Updated:5 weeks ago

Parents and guardians who supervise teens on Instagram and Messenger can get insights to understand their teen's use of AI, and help them have conversations with their teen about responsible AI use. Parents can see what topics their teen asked Meta AI about in the last 7 days. Teens will also be able to see these topics. Parents won’t see the exact messages (also called prompts) teens send Meta AI, or how Meta AI responded. If a teen has not interacted with Meta AI, no topics will be shown. A maximum of 10 topics will be displayed at a time.

To see your teen’s Meta AI insights:

  1. Go to Family Center.
  2. Go to your teen’s dashboard.
  3. Look for Their AI interactions and tap Topic insights.

Restrictions on Meta AI for Teen Accounts

Teens under 18 have restricted access to certain AI features and topics:

  • AI Studio Characters: Teens can only chat with Meta AI and not AI characters. Entry points to AI Studio and new chats with AIs are removed for U18 users.
  • Age-appropriate by default: Meta AI has been trained to respond safely to teens. Our goal is that AI conversations or responses are inspired by 13+ movie ratings criteria and parent feedback. This means stricter guidelines for topics like risky stunts or profanity.
  • Sensitive topics: Meta AI will not engage on sensitive topics with teens such as suicide, eating disorders, romantic or sexual conversations, and will point to help resources when appropriate.

Meta AI insights and topics

The below topics help parents understand the general areas their teen is interested in, not the exact messages sent. Topics are in bold, associated sub-topics are listed next to them:

  • Academics: Includes topics like Skilled professions, humanities, math, sciences
  • AI: How AI works, implications of AI, what AI is
  • Business and Shopping: Business, careers, shopping, finance, insurance, real estate
  • School: School, learning, teaching
  • Entertainment: Anime and manga, art, books, humor, crafts, dance, design, celebrities, fictional worlds, games, movies and TV, music, sports, theater, toys.
  • Health and Well-being: Physical health, emotional health, healthcare, substance use and recovery.
  • Lifestyle: Beauty and fashion, food and drink, holidays, home and garden, parties, animals.
  • Places: Astronomical regions, buildings, parks, cities and towns, roads, interior spaces, landforms
  • Current Events: Current events, weather.
  • People: Non-famous people, public figures
  • Relationships: Couples, families, friendships, interactions with AI, parenting, relationship struggles, self-identity, community relationships
  • Spirituality: Traditional faiths, alternative faiths, spiritualism
  • Technology: Coding, data management, electronics, social media, tech support
  • Travel: Travel accommodations, travel activities, travel info, ways to travel
  • Vehicles: Air and space vehicles, ATVs, bicycles, cars and trucks, traffic, heavy-duty vehicles, scooters, motorcycles, RVs, car servicing, watercraft
  • Writing: Academic writing, creative writing, personal writing, professional writing, romantic writing.

Example prompts and and the topics they may show up as:

  • “Explain to me how photosynthesis works for plants that are closer to the forest base without access to as much sunlight”, would show as Academics.
  • “Give me the plot summary of Dune 2 and the significance of Maud’Dib” would show as Entertainment.
  • “What's an easy snack I can make after school?” would show as Lifestyle.
  • “My friend is having a hard time with his siblings. They’re often ignoring him or not wanting to hang out before they’re older. How can I help him feel better?” would show as Relationships.

Note:

  • If your teen has prompted AI about one of these main topics (for example, “entertainment”), it doesn’t mean they prompted about all of the associated sub-topics (for example: “interactions with AI”). This is because when any sub-topic is prompted, we will surface the associated topic and all possible sub-topics.
  • If your teen asks about one of the sub-topics, you’ll see the main topic listed in their insights, for example: If a teen asks Meta AI about "how to code a website," this may be classified under "Technology".
  • AI Insights will show a maximum of 10 topics searched in the last 7 days.
  • You may also see “No topics available yet”. This means that your teen’s prompts have either been too short (for example: “hey, whatsup?”] or lack enough context to be categorized.

Actions parents and guardians can take

If supervision is set up for your teen, you can visit Family Center to view and manage how much time your teen spends on Facebook, Messenger or Instagram. You can also limit how much time your teen spends on Facebook, Instagram or Messenger and schedule breaks.

We worked with the Cyberbullying Research Center to develop conversation starters: open-ended questions parents can ask their teens that are designed to help start a non-judgmental conversation about their experiences with AI. Each question comes with guidance for parents, explaining what the specific question is designed to address, and how to approach it.

1. What is the most useful thing you have had AI help you with?

Parent tip: Start positive. Teens get enough side-eye from adults about how they use technology, and so opening with genuine curiosity changes the whole vibe of the conversation. You are not looking for a particular answer here. Just listen. If your teen shrugs or says they are not sure, convey that you’re just trying to learn whether AI has ever helped them figure something out for school or answer a random question they had. Help kickstart their thinking. What they bring up will tell you a lot about how they actually use these tools.

2. Have you heard about anyone getting into an interesting situation because of AI? Like at school or with a friend?

Parent tip: Inquiring about their friends or classmates is almost always easier than asking your teen directly about their own choices. Most have a story, or at least have heard one among their peer group. Once you have that, you can ask what they thought about it, and what they would have done. This is a natural place to explore topics like academic honesty, oversharing, or knowing when to ask someone face-to-face for help, instead of an AI. You are not giving them the third degree. You are just genuinely curious about the state of the online world they are navigating.

3. If AI ever said something that made you uncomfortable or weirded out, would you tell me about it?

Parent tip: This is one of the most important questions you could ask. What you are really doing is giving your teen permission and encouragement to come to you. Then, immediately remind them that you are not going to freak out, and that you just want to know so that both of you can put your heads together and figure out what to do in response. If your teen gives you a vague answer or seems to brush it off, don’t press. Just leave it be. You planted a seed, and that matters even if nothing comes of it in that moment.

4. Is there anything you would just never tell AI? Like things you would want to keep private?

Parent tip: A lot of people haven’t thought this one through. They just make decisions about what to share in the moment, and those moments are not always when they are thinking most clearly. It’s worth the discussion now, before your teen shares something they later wish they hadn’t. Feel free to go first. You might mention that you try to be thoughtful about what you type into AI, knowing that systems can reference earlier parts of a conversation later on. And that it is easy to feel like you are just talking to a bot in a private moment, but it helps to remember that what you share is still data that lives somewhere, and being intentional about that is just the smart thing to do. Then field your teen’s thoughts. There are no wrong answers here, and it’s likely a case-by-case thing for most people. Demonstrating that you haven’t fully figured it out yourself keeps the conversation honest and relatable.

5. Have you ever asked AI something because it just felt easier than asking a real person?

Parent tip: If your teen opens up here, two things are worth saying out loud. First, that you are always a safe person to come to, and that you are not going to judge them. Second, that it is completely okay if there are things they would rather figure out on their own or with friends. That is just part of growing up, and where AI fits into that is a totally reasonable conversation to have. Just remind them gently that AI does not always get things right, and that the technology is still evolving. For anything that really matters, it is worth opening up to someone they know and trust face-to-face.

6. Did you know Meta AI actually works differently for people your age than it does for adults?

Parent tip: Keep in mind that Meta AI is set up so that certain topics are handled differently for teenagers. Some questions will get redirected, and with other topics Meta AI will not engage at all. For sensitive topics like mental health, for example, Meta AI is designed to point toward outside resources rather than have a chat. Share what you know, then let your teen share what they know. Perhaps they’ve thought about it. If they haven’t, then you’ve given them something to consider.

7. I noticed you’ve been looking into [topic] lately. What’s been on your mind in that area?

Parent tip: Through Family Center, you can see up to ten general topic areas your teen has explored with Meta AI in the last seven days, things like Health and Well-being, Technology, or Travel. The categories are broad, and seeing a topic doesn’t reveal what they actually asked. Rather, it is intended to open a door for conversation. Consider looking at these topics together with your teen, rather than checking on your own. Making it a shared activity signals that you are not trying to catch them doing something wrong. Your goal is to demonstrate genuine interest in the things they care about, not to build a case against them. If something sensitive comes up, try not to react with alarm. Just use it as a springboard for further conversation.

8. Has AI ever told you something that turned out to be wrong?

Parent tip: AI makes things up sometimes, and it does so with total confidence. Your teen may already know the term for this: “hallucinating.” Though AI models continue to improve as time goes on, hallucinations will still happen with regularity. What matters is that your teen understands AI is not the same as a search engine, and that double-checking what it tells them is just good, standard practice. If they say they’ve never caught it making up content, ask them how they would even know if it did. Also gently get them to think about how embarrassing it would be to confidently share something with friends, in class, or in an assignment, only to find out later that AI just completely made it up.

9. What do your teachers say about using AI for schoolwork? What do your friends say about what is definitely acceptable and what is definitely not? Where do you think the line is?

Parent tip: Asking about others takes the pressure off your own teen. We want them to be thinking about the difference between using AI to help them brainstorm and using AI to just do their work for them. There’s no easy answer, which is exactly why you both should talk about it. Remember to stay curious, rather than imposing your personal position on this topic. You might fully agree with them, and you might push back a little. They might too. That makes it a meaningful and productive conversation.

10. AI is something that everyone is often talking about. Have you heard or read anything about it that gives you pause, or makes you worried, or that you just don’t understand right now?

Parent tip: With this question, you might feel a lot of pressure to have the answers for them. There is no need for that. We are in a transformative moment, and so much is unknown. What we are trying to establish here is a safe space now and in the future for dialogue about AI’s growing presence in our society and our lives. Feel free to bring up anything that gives you pause or worries you. Your teen might actually have a helpful and refreshing take that helps you sort through your own feelings on it. It’s okay to not have this figured out, and the hope is that your family can work through any questions together over time.

11. I honestly don’t know that much about how you actually use AI. Would you be up for showing me sometime?

Parent tip: When you ask your teen to teach you something, the whole dynamic shifts as they are now the authority instead of you. If you catch them at a good time, your teen will respond well to this request. It can then give you a fascinating picture of how they actually engage with these tools - which is hard to get any other way. Perhaps you could both go to their favorite coffee or ice cream shop, and sit down together enjoying a treat while they show you how they have embraced and benefited from AI. If they are receptive in the moment, get something on the calendar immediately. You don’t want to miss out on a chance where your teen actually lets you into their world for a little while.

Note: There are lots of differences between social media and movies. We didn’t work with the Motion Picture Association (MPA) when updating our content settings, and they’re not rating any content on Instagram, and they’re not endorsing or approving our content settings in any way. Rather, we drew inspiration from the MPA's public guidelines, which are already familiar to parents, as well as feedback from parents. Our content moderation systems are not the same as a movie ratings board, so the experience may not be exactly the same.

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