My daughter’s second-grade teacher assigned what should have been a straightforward project: an oral presentation about her family’s country of origin with a poster that includes at least five images.
But as my daughter searched online for pictures of the traditions, food and wildlife of Costa Rica, her research ran into an unexpected obstacle.
Her results for three-toed sloths, the slow-moving and beloved tree dwellers that inhabit Costa Rica’s rainforest, turned up a slew of unbearably adorable pictures. Some seemed to smile for the camera as they hung from trees. Closer inspection showed they were too cute to be true. Many of the images that popped up were AI-generated. It turned an assignment about our family’s heritage into a lesson about what’s real on the internet.
With the increasing amount of generative AI content in search results, social media posts and videos we’re now exposed to online, it’s an issue kids and their parents must be grappling with in nearly every grade now, even more so at higher grade levels. But how much of the online content our kids encounter as they seek to understand the world will be fake?
Since the release of ChatGPT two years ago, Google, Microsoft and other big tech companies have started incorporating AI into search engines, chatbots, mobile devices and a growing number of other features and products.
That’s a huge threat to the business of journalism and other human-generated sources of information that produce the content that companies use to train their generative AI systems, and tech companies have understandably faced backlash from publishers that depend on search traffic. But there’s also the swarm of AI-generated content those searches are linking to, which complicates tasks as simple as looking up real animal pictures.
It didn’t take long for my daughter and her older sister to notice visual clues that could help them determine what images were more likely to be AI-generated. Did the sloth seem to be mugging for the camera? Was its facial expression just a little too human? Those were tip-offs. We laughed as we weeded out the unrealistically vivid and comically fake results, like the sloths in Glamour style poses.
As a millennial, I grew up with the internet, but the digital world of my childhood was slow and unsophisticated, with dial-up modems and competing search engines such as AltaVista and Ask Jeeves. Google Image Search didn’t come out until I was 17 and, being something of a technological skeptic, I got my first cellphone at 21.
My daughters are Generation Alpha, and the digital world they were born into is far more instant, omnipresent and complex. Like many parents, my wife and I have tried to strike a balance between protecting our kids from too much screen time and giving them access to the internet, understanding that much of their lives will be conducted online.
I think my kids’ tech savvy and ability to distinguish between what’s real and what’s AI-generated will be more sophisticated than any prior generation. But it’s sad nonetheless that part of growing up today means learning to navigate an online world so rife with manufactured and misleading content. I worry about the impacts on their conception of truth versus fiction. It seems especially relevant at a time when politicians such as Donald Trump and JD Vance are shamelessly spreading false information, like their dangerous denial of the 2020 election results and racist lies that Haitian immigrants are eating cats.
Our children are inheriting an information ecosystem where they must constantly remember not to trust everything they see.
A few days earlier I coincidentally bought my kids a hardbound visual encyclopedia, and they’ve been cracking it open at the dining table to look up things like pandas and dances of the world. As they flipped through its pages, it was reassuring to know I could trust that what they were reading was real and true.
By the time her project was due, my daughter managed to pull together six images of Costa Rica’s flag, food, typical dress and music and found what is hopefully a bonafide sloth hanging from a branch. But I still had to wonder how many of my daughter’s classmates waded through a similar flood of fake images and content as they researched Mexico, the Philippines and other homelands for their presentations.
How many of you have navigated similarly AI-infested waters with your kids? Write to me or to letters@latimes.com. I’d love to hear your experience.