Storytelling bears. Wary parents. AI toys step cautiously toward Christmas.

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The artificial intelligence revolution is headed for Toyland. It may prove a bouncy sleigh ride.

The technology raises concerns about privacy and socialization that have made the industry wary. So, AI’s most effective foray into the toy world may be one of adding capabilities to existing toys and only slowly creating new ones.

Why We Wrote This

Toys and games can help teach children to problem-solve and interact in positive ways with the world. What role will artificial intelligence play in these products? And how can parents and teachers support healthy modern play?

“This holiday season you’ll have … a handful of good AI-powered toys, but not a ton,” says Robin Raskin, a longtime industry insider. But “Within two years, it’s likely that toys are all going to have some AI component.”

The toy industry is still smarting from a decade ago when companies rushed in with internet-connected toys and ran into a brick wall of public resistance.

Mattel, for example, pulled the plug on Hello Barbie after groups complained that the pioneering doll that could converse, sing, and even tell jokes was recording voices and relaying them over the internet without permission.

It’s not clear that an AI educational toy will make children smarter in the long run, says Randi Williams, program manager at Algorithmic Justice League, a nonprofit working to make AI a universal benefit. But decades of research has shown that children who use technology well post significant short-term learning gains.

The artificial intelligence revolution is headed for Toyland. It may prove a bouncy sleigh ride.

The promise is straightforward: AI can provide toys and games that are ever fresh and help children learn through rich interactions. By one forecast, the smart/AI segment of the industry will more than triple its sales to $40 billion by 2032.

But the technology raises concerns about privacy and socialization that have made the industry wary.

Why We Wrote This

Toys and games can help teach children to problem-solve and interact in positive ways with the world. What role will artificial intelligence play in these products? And how can parents and teachers support healthy modern play?

So, AI’s most effective foray into the toy world may be one of stealth: adding capabilities to existing toys as well as creating brand-new ones.

“This holiday season you’ll have … a handful of good AI-powered toys, but not a ton,” says Robin Raskin, a longtime industry insider. But “Within two years, it’s likely that toys are all going to have some AI component.”

One of the most visible AI toys this Christmas is Poe the AI Story Bear. Children pick the type of story they want – from bedtime stories to superhero adventures – and choose from a slate of characters, and the bear tells a unique story in any of 30 languages.

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