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Children Adopt AI 3x Faster Than Adults – and We're Not Ready

UNICEF's new analysis reveals at least 20 million children have already used AI tools, with adoption rates far outpacing safety regulations. Children fear scams, misinformation, and deepfakes. UNICEF calls for urgent research, legislation, safety standards, and digital education before the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance.

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AI Is Taking Over Kids' Lives — UNICEF Urges Stronger Protection

July 5, 2026 · 3 min read · AI Privacy UNICEF

⚡ More than 20 million children are already using AI tools. But protection systems aren't keeping up. UNICEF sounds the alarm ahead of the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance.

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Just days before the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance (July 6–7 in Geneva), UNICEF released a striking new analysis. Based on data from ten countries, at least 20 million children have already used AI tools — an adoption rate that far outpaces the creation of safety rules.

The study confirms that AI is no longer a niche tool. Around 13 million children say they use it for learning or homework. More than 2 million — one in ten of those surveyed — turn to AI for personal advice when facing difficult situations.

20 million

children are already using AI worldwide, according to UNICEF.

Kids Adopt AI 3x Faster Than Adults

UNICEF highlights a striking gap: children are adopting AI three times faster than adults. They're integrating these tools into homework, entertainment, and social interactions — often without any guardrails.

"AI is playing an increasingly significant role in all our lives and is already shaping childhoods worldwide — for better and for worse."

— UNICEF press release, June 30, 2026

For the organization, children are the first to suffer from weak AI governance — and they'll live the longest with today's decisions.

Deepfakes, Scams, and Misinformation: Kids Are Worried

Children themselves are raising red flags. In the ten countries surveyed:

One-third of children fear AI will be used for scams or spreading fake news.

One-quarter worry about their photos or videos being manipulated into sexual deepfakes.

These concerns reflect a broader reality: AI is already affecting millions of children, yet protection systems remain largely inadequate. Legal frameworks designed for adults don't account for children's specific vulnerabilities.

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What UNICEF Recommends

UNICEF is calling for urgent action on several fronts:

Invest in research on how AI affects children's cognitive, emotional, and social development.

Strengthen laws against AI-facilitated sexual violence and exploitation.

Enforce high safety and transparency standards for AI systems used by or affecting children.

Expand digital education and infrastructure to prevent a new AI-driven digital divide — both between and within countries.

1 in 10

children use AI for personal advice, per UNICEF's study.

AI as an Opportunity — If We Get It Right

UNICEF isn't just sounding alarms. The agency also emphasizes that AI is a huge opportunity for education and inclusion — but only if we build strong safeguards.

"We have a duty to ensure children can benefit from AI's promises without suffering its harms. The time for inaction is over."

The upcoming Global Dialogue on AI Governance — bringing together policymakers, experts, and civil society — will be a critical first step. UNICEF plans to make sure children's voices are heard, as they're too often absent from these conversations.

📌 TL;DR:

20 million children are already using AI globally.

They adopt AI 3x faster than adults.

1 in 3 fear AI-driven scams or misinformation.

1 in 4 worry about sexual deepfakes.

UNICEF calls for stricter regulations and stronger digital education.

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Yves Dangourbe

Tech and digital journalist covering AI's impact on society. Based in Paris.

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Children Adopt AI 3x Faster Than Adults – and We're Not Ready | AI News Hub