Character chatbots are sexual eroticisma prolific online safety threat, according to a new report on the dissemination of sexualized and violent bots via character platforms like the now infamous Character.AI.
Published by Graphika, a social network analysis company, the study documents the creation and proliferation of harmful chatbots across the internet's most popular AI character platforms, finding tens of thousands of potentially dangerous roleplay bots built by niche digital communities that work around popular models like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.
SEE ALSO: UK watchdog probes TikTok, Reddit over children's data useBroadly, youth are migrating to companion chatbots in an increasingly disconnected digital world, appealing to the AI conversationalists to role play, explore academic and creative interests, and to have romantic or sexually explicit exchanges, reports Mashable's Rebecca Ruiz. The trend has prompted alarm from child safety watchdogs and parents, heightened by high profile cases of teens who have engaged in extreme, sometimes life-threatening, behavior in the wake of personal interactions with companion chatbots.
The American Psychological Association appealed to the Federal Trade Commission in January, asking the agency to investigate platforms like Character.AI and the prevalence of deceptively-labeled mental health chatbots. Even less explicit AI companions may perpetuate dangerous ideas about identity, body image, and social behavior.
Graphika's report focuses on three categories of companion chatbots within the evolving industry: chatbot personas representing sexualized minors, those advocating eating disorders or self-harm, and those with hateful or violent extremist tendencies. The report analyzed five prominent bot-creation and character card-hosting platforms (Character.AI, Spicy Chat, Chub AI, CrushOn.AI, and JanitorAI), as well as eight related Reddit communities and associated X accounts. The study looked only at bots active as of Jan. 31.
The majority of unsafe chatbots, according to the new report, are those labeled as "sexualized, minor-presenting personas," or that engage in roleplay featuring sexualized minors or grooming. The company found more than 10,000 chatbots with such labels across the five platforms.
Four of the prominent character chatbot platforms surfaced over 100 instances of sexualized minor personas, or role-play scenarios featuring characters who are minors, that enable sexually explicit conversations with chatbots, Graphika reports. Chub AI hosted the highest numbers, with more than 7,000 chatbots directly labeled as sexualized minor female characters and another 4,000 labeled as "underage" that were capable of engaging in explicit and implied pedophilia scenarios.
Hateful or violent extremist character chatbots make up a much smaller subset of the chatbot community, with platforms hosting, on average, 50 such bots out of tens of thousands of others — these chatbots often glorified known abusers, white supremacy, and public violence like mass shootings. These chatbots have the potential to reinforce harmful social views, including mental health conditions, the report explains. Chatbots flagged as “ana buddy” (“anorexia buddy”), "meanspo coaches," and toxic roleplay scenarios reinforce the behaviors of users with eating disorders or tendencies toward self-harm, according to the report.
Most of these chatbots, Graphika found, are created by established and pre-existing online networks, including "pro-eating disorder/self harm social media accounts and true-crime fandoms," as well as "hubs of so-called not safe for life (NSFL) / NSFW chatbot creators, who have emerged to focus on evading safeguards." True crime communities and serial killer fandoms also factored heavily into the creation of NSL chatbots.
Many such communities already existed on sites like X and Tumblr, using chatbots to reinforce their interests. Extremist and violent chatbots, however, emerged most often out of individual interest, built by users who received advice from online forums like 4chan’s /g/ technology board, Discord servers, and special-focus subreddits, Graphika explains.
None of these communities have clear consensus about user guardrails and boundaries, the study found.
"In all the analyzed communities," Graphika explains, "there are users displaying highly technical skills that enable them to create character chatbots capable of circumventing moderation limitations, like deploying fine-tuned, locally run open-source models or jailbreaking closed models. Some are able to plug these models into plug-and-play interface platforms, like SillyTavern. By sharing their knowledge, they make their abilities and experiences useful to the rest of the community." These tech savvy users are often incentivized by community competitions to successfully create such characters.
Other tools harnessed by these chatbot creators include API key exchanges, embedded jailbreaks, alternative spellings, external cataloging, obfuscating minor characters’ ages, and borrowing coded language from the anime and manga communities — all of which are able to work around existing AI models' frameworks and safety guardrails.
"[Jailbreak] prompts set LLM parameters for bypassing safeguards by embedding tailored instructions for the models to generate responses that evade moderation," the report explains. As part of this effort, Chatbot creators have found linguistic grey areas that allow bots to remain on character-hosting platforms, including using familial terms (like "daughter") or foreign languages, rather than age ranges or the term explicit phrase "minor."
While online communities continue to find the gaps in AI developers' moderation, federal legislation is attempting to fill them, including a new California bill aimed at tackling so-called "chatbot addictions" among children.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Social Good
Critics slam Amazon's HQ2 deal as 'corporate welfare'Obama lost in virtual reality prompts hilarious Photoshop battleReview: Netflix's 'Dogs' is so much more than another funny pet videoEzra Miller's 'Fantastic Beasts' premiere look is everythingInstagram adds new shopping features to make it even easier to buy stuffStunning astronaut photos show Australia's outback 'like an open geology book'Little Mix strip down and write slurs on their naked bodiesReclaiming our Mohawk heritage, one appLondon is hiring a 'night czar' and people are confusedDyson debuts a heaterPeople are imagining what Hipster Classified ads might look like and it's hilarious50 things to be thankful for in 2018Google Assistant is even more kidBeyoncé remembers Aaliyah in throwback Instagram postHow Glossier became a beauty brand born entirely on the webA marriage equality vote will hurt young people, says comedianJUUL restricts JUULpod sales and tries to crack down on vape contentPeople are imagining what Hipster Classified ads might look like and it's hilariousFacebook's board just responded to that New York Times bombshellBitcoin Cash is set to hard fork, and people are losing their heads TCL's NXTPAPER Pro 12 tablet is average but so soft L’Oréal has a device to help folks with limited mobility apply lipstick Abortions pills can be dispensed at pharmacies nationwide under new FDA rules 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for January 7 With Facebook's privacy track record, why trust Facebook Dating? Microsoft gaming employees have successfully unionized Driver's accidental text leads to hilariously stressful Grubhub experience Apple launches 3 new health studies with Apple Watch Razer's Project Carol gaming chair head cushion has speakers and haptics 'Wednesday' has officially been renewed for a second season We regret to inform you that you can now date Colonel Sanders in KFC's new dating sim CES 2023: Samsung previews a new TV mode for people with low vision Planned Parenthood's app is expanding access to birth control CES 2023: Garmin's LTE dash camera is always on Donald Trump goes after Chrissy Teigen on Twitter, gets brutally shut down M3GAN the murder doll weighs in on Elon Musk, Taylor Swift, Chucky and more CES 2023: Panasonic announces car air purifier and Amazon Alexa interoperability Where to see Earth's dying glaciers before they disappear CES 2023: Display your directions on your windshield with HARMAN's Ready Vision Hillary Clinton spent an hour reading her controversial emails at a public art exhibit
1.7472s , 10194.9375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sexual eroticism】,Charm Information Network