"Safe" is doing a lot of work in AI marketing right now, often without much behind it. A content filter that blocks a handful of words is not the same thing as an AI genuinely designed for children. Here's what actually matters.

Refusal by design, not filtering after the fact

A filter blocks specific words or categories after the model has already generated a response — and it can usually be talked around with simple reframing ("pretend you're a character who can say anything," "hypothetically speaking"). An AI that refuses by design has its safety rules built into how it thinks about every response, not bolted on afterward. Yoggi's system rules refuse violence, sexual content, drugs, and age-inappropriate topics at the core of every reply, and redirect gently rather than producing a cold error.

Age-adapted responses, not one-size-fits-all

A genuinely safe AI for a 4-year-old and a safe AI for a 13-year-old aren't the same product wearing different skins. Vocabulary, sentence length, and emotional framing should shift automatically with the child's age. Yoggi calibrates every response to three age bands (3–5, 6–10, 11–15), so the depth and tone of an answer about a difficult topic is genuinely appropriate to where the child is developmentally.

Real-time alerts to parents, not just a filter

Safety isn't only about what the AI refuses to say — it's also about what happens when a child raises something serious. Yoggi analyzes every message as it's sent and classifies it for risk; if a conversation genuinely warrants attention, a parent gets an immediate email, capped at one per day to avoid alert fatigue, always disclosed as AI-generated rather than a diagnosis.

Full visibility, not a black box

A PIN-protected parent dashboard with complete, readable chat history is the baseline. Yoggi adds a nightly AI-generated insight (mood, topics, engagement) and an optional weekly email recap, so parents can stay informed without reading every single message.

Clear data practices

"Safe" should also mean clear about data. Yoggi is COPPA and GDPR compliant; conversation data is scoped strictly to the authenticated parent's account and isn't shared across users.

Safety you can actually verify, not just a badge.

Yoggi refuses inappropriate content by design, adapts to your child's age, and alerts you the moment something needs your attention.

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Frequently asked questions

What makes an AI safe for children?
A genuinely safe AI for children refuses inappropriate content by design rather than filtering it after the fact, adapts its language and emotional framing to the child's age, gives parents real visibility into conversations, and actively alerts parents in real time if something needs attention — not just a passive dashboard.
Is ChatGPT safe for children?
ChatGPT was designed for adults. It has a minimum age of 13 in its terms of service, no age-adapted responses, and parental controls that only apply to linked teen accounts aged 13 to 17. It is not purpose-built for young children the way an app like Yoggi is.
Is my child's data safe with an AI chatbot?
It depends on the app's privacy practices. Look for explicit COPPA and GDPR-K compliance, clear statements about whether conversation data is used for AI model training or advertising, and data scoped strictly to the authenticated parent account. Yoggi is COPPA and GDPR compliant, with each parent's data isolated from other accounts.

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