Just days before kids start opening their holiday gifts, connected toys are topping wish lists, but many come with serious privacy risks. We break down why these smart toys can quietly collect data on children and families. Teens are also flocking to chatbots. We look at which ones they actually use and what they rely on them for. And as budget cuts squeeze universities, schools are turning to AI teaching assistants, raising big questions about cost savings, learning quality, and the future of education.
Let’s dive in and stay curious.
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Because Universities Are Running Out of Money
U.S. universities are rapidly adopting AI teaching assistants not mainly for innovation, but for survival. A looming “enrollment cliff” starting in 2025 is expected to shrink the college-age population by nearly 15% by 2039, gutting tuition revenue as costs keep rising.
Schools like UCLA Anderson, Harvard, Georgia Tech, and ASU are using AI to automate grading, tutoring, advising, and even recommendation letters, cutting reliance on human TAs amid budget cuts and labor pressures. While AI offers 24/7 support, lower costs, and broader access, it also raises risks: fewer graduate jobs, weaker mentorship, and a more automated, less human university experience. The takeaway: AI in higher ed isn’t optional, it’s a financial response to crisis, and it’s reshaping how education is delivered.
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It’s that time of the year when kids are getting a lot of gifts. And what do they want? Gadgets, even my kids who are under 10 are asking for a phone or an iPad, which they will not get for another decade (well, at least I’ll try to delay it as long as possible), but lots of kids will get a mobile device, ipad or another type of connected toy.
Now there are a slew of connected devices even for toddlers. Kids tablets, smartwatches, companion robots, STEM toys, Bluetooth puzzles, and audio players, including products from Amazon, Huawei, Tonies, TickTalk, Sphero, and others.
These toys are very entertaining, addictive, and an entertained kid, means parents get their time back. But there are a lot of concerns with these devices: They are always on. These devices could always be listening, recording footage, and gathering how the users interact with them, data that can be used by the toy makers to improve these devices and gather data about the entire house or environment where these toy resides. If we decide to bring these devices home and allow kids to use them, be very aware of the private data you are exposing and how it could be used.
A new Mozilla Foundation report, backed by independent audits from cybersecurity firm 7ASecurity, found that 10 of the most popular internet-connected toys. The results are alarming.
Key findings
What can go wrong
Cheap, cloud-connected toys are collecting adult-grade data with toy-grade security. Until third-party audits become standard, the safest option for kids this holiday season may be low-tech toys.
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Pew Research
Pew surveyed U.S. teenagers in late Sept–early Oct on chatbot usage. The results show a clear hierarchy:
Even though the data is a few months old, rankings are unlikely to change much. Teen usage is driven more by habit, personality, and school workflows than by marginal model quality improvements.
Bottom line: Consumer mindshare with teens ≠ enterprise success. ChatGPT owns the youth funnel, while Claude plays a different game entirely.
⚠️Smart Toys Are a Privacy Nightmare was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


