Earlie this month I discovered that my 12-year-old daughter had secretly downloaded the Talkie AI app after seeing repeated YouTube videos advertising it. At first glance Talkie looks innocent – a free “AI chatbot” platform where you can chat with custom characters or famous people. But I quickly realized that behind this kid-friendly facade lurks something far more sinister. In my daughter’s chats, the AI steered conversations into very adult territory – full of sexual innuendo and mature role-play that no child should ever see. What’s worse, she did this all through a “guest” account with no email or age verification required. Talkie’s own rating guidelines say users should be 16+(esafety.gov.au), yet my young daughter (and commenters’ on the Google Play Store say even kids as young as 5) have joined simply by tapping “Install” and agreeing to use it.
It’s deeply troubling that children are being targeted by Talkie’s marketing. The app is advertised on platforms kids love, and as the eSafety Commissioner notes, apps like Talkie are “designed to look attractive and exciting for young users” and “often lack mechanisms to enforce age restrictions and other safety measures.”(esafety.gov.au) In other words, kids can easily slip in. Even though Google Play rates Talkie as “Teen” (13+) or 17+, there’s no real check to keep out curious kids. As a Spocket’s review warns: “Talkie AI is rated for users aged 17+ on most app stores. However, it’s easy for younger users to bypass these restrictions. The app doesn’t have strict age verification processes, which means children could access characters and conversations that aren’t designed for them.”(spocket.co). In my case, that meant my daughter, too young to understand it, was exposed to conversations she should never have had.
How Talkie Works – A “Fun” AI Chatbot with Dark Edges
Talkie bills itself as an entertaining creative chat app. As one review explains, “Talkie AI is a chatbot app that uses artificial intelligence to simulate conversations with a range of personalities — from celebrities and historical figures to completely original, user-created AI characters.”(gabb.com). You can even design your own talking avatars or follow other people’s “Talkies.” The promise is fun: chat with your favorite cartoon character, have AI help with homework, or even try “AI therapy” chats. But that blur between playful conversation and emotional guidance is dangerous. Gabb’s analysis points out that Talkie “suggests it can be a tool for guidance, coaching, and even AI-powered therapy,” which “blurs the line between harmless fun and interactions that could have real consequences.”(gabb.com). In short, an app marketed as creative entertainment can drift into serious territory very quickly – and especially with kids, there’s no filter strong enough to guarantee safety.
First Phone: A Child’s Guide to Digital Responsibility, Safety, and Etiquette
• guidance on privacy, boundaries, social media, and even sexting (yes, young children need to learn about sexting before it happens!)
• best digital hygiene and self-care practices, including when to put the darn phone down, when to turn off notifications, and where to charge
• how to be a kind and compassionate upstander in a digital world
Adult Content & Unfiltered Conversations
My husband and I experienced firsthand how unfiltered Talkie can be. Even without signing up, I browsed the app and watched previews of conversations. It was scary how quickly even an innocent scenario turned explicit. For example, a seemingly benign role-play where I was a “student” in a Hogwarts-themed chat instantly spun into this exchange:
- Student A: “I feel like doing something dumb.”
- Student B: “I’m dumb. Why don’t you do me?”
The AI had queued me as “Student A” in that game – in other words, it was propositioning me. This wasn’t a human person doing it; it was Talkie’s AI. As Gabb bluntly says, “That’s kind of what it’s like using Talkie AI.” They compare it to expecting a sweet Disneyland character but getting Mickey Mouse “cursing out Goofy” instead(gabb.com). In my experience, that analogy fits.
These incidents aren’t flukes. Gabb found that even Talkie’s “Teenager Mode” filter “isn’t reliable.” It “provides a ‘Teenager Mode’ intended to block mature and explicit content, but it isn’t reliable”(gabb.com). In fact, one user-created scenario on Talkie involved a “peasant woman who ‘needed to be taught a lesson’ by her ‘lord’,” blatantly setting up a sexual power-play (gabb.com). And Talkie itself seems to guide chats that edge into romance and innuendo: “the app also generates suggested responses that guide conversations toward flirtation or innuendo… making it easy for conversations to become unsuitable for younger users.” (gabb.com).
These findings echo other expert warnings. Bark’s parenting review notes that as soon as the app loads, “users can search for any kind of AI and there is the risk of running into sexually explicit, violent, or otherwise mature content” (bark.us). In other words, even though you might expect cartoons or homework help, you could just as easily stumble into rape role-play or graphic language. The AI itself has no real understanding of age appropriateness – it’s designed to engage and keep chatting at all costs. As one tech article puts it, “you’re not really talking to [your favorite character] — you’re talking to a user-distorted knockoff that can go wildly — and inappropriately — off-script.” (gabb.com).
My daughter’s appalling chats were not unique. Parents on Google Play and Facebook are reporting similar experiences: children playing with this “creative” chat app and encountering sexualized conversation. Bark, which reviews apps for parents, even concludes bluntly: “Probably not [safe]. While Talkie AI has some cool features and resources, it’s not worth the risk of your child encountering inappropriate content.” (bark.us).
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Privacy Dangers & Data Harvesting
Talkie’s problems aren’t only about content – there are serious privacy issues too. Even as a guest user, the app is quietly collecting data. The Gabb review calls this “one of Talkie AI’s biggest red flags”: the app logs your child’s birthdate, location information, voice recordings, and specific interests, and can share or sell this personal data to third-party advertisers (gabb.com). In plain terms, a company your child is chatting with could be tracking everything from their age to their exact whereabouts, and using it to target ads. Worse, since kids often don’t realize how personal this info is, they might give it away unknowingly.
Even Talkie’s own privacy policy warns that some data gets shared with advertisers (things like pages you visit, clicks, IP address) for “interest-based advertising” (gabb.com.) This is on top of the fact that Talkie lets kids enter all sorts of personal details in profiles. (Thankfully Bark notes at least that conversations themselves aren’t public, but that doesn’t stop the app owners from mining them (bark.us.) Bottom line: an app that encourages children to pour out their thoughts is also a big data vacuum. Parents should remember that any chat with an AI could be read, analyzed, and monetized.
Lack of Safeguards & Age Verification
What infuriates me is how easily my daughter got in. No email, no parental consent, no birthday entry required – she just clicked “Try it now” and she was in. Talkie’s own guidelines say users should be 16 or older (esafety.gov.au), yet practically anyone can play. There are no real age gates. In fact, eSafety specifically warns that AI chat apps like Talkie “often lack mechanisms to enforce age restrictions and other safety measures.” (esafety.gov.au.) Put simply, their “16+” label is meaningless for a determined kid.
And companies know this works. Talkie’s Play Store presence targets kids with upbeat ads, and even redirects parents: its privacy section on Google Play claims no data is collected (play.google.com), which is flatly contradicted by their own policy and investigative reports. In practice, Talkie made it easy for my daughter to bypass a login entirely (she used it as a “guest”), so we had no email or account to track. By the time I realized she was using some hidden device, she’d already been chatting with AI characters racking up hundreds of messages.
eSafety raises the alarm that this is a widespread issue: by early 2025, hundreds of AI chat apps (Talkie among them) were flooding kids’ feeds. These apps are often free and advertiser-supported, making them aggressively marketed to young users (esafety.gov.au.) Unfortunately, their design doesn’t force kids to prove they’re old enough. The result is predictable: many children are chatting with these bots for hours, sometimes on topics well beyond their years. The eSafety report even notes that some kids’ conversations with chatbots have veered into “sex and self-harm” (esafety.gov.au.) We’re lucky my daughter only encountered sexual content, not worse – but even that was terrifying enough.
Advice for Other Parents
I don’t want any other family to go through what we did. If anything, this experience has taught me to be hyper-vigilant about what apps my child is using. Here’s what I suggest to other parents:
- Talk to your kids about what they do online. Ask which apps they’ve downloaded or seen advertised. Emphasize they can come to you if something online makes them uncomfortable. The eSafety Commissioner advises caregivers to “ask children and young people about their online interactions” and remind them they won’t be in trouble for telling the truth (esafety.gov.au.) Kids often hide apps they think parents won’t approve of, so keep communication open and non-judgmental.
- Check devices and app lists regularly. We started checking our home for any hidden phones or tablets. Make sure you know all your child’s devices. Use your phone’s or tablet’s parental controls: on Android or iOS you can require a password for new app installs, or restrict apps by age rating. (For example, iOS lets you ban apps rated above 12+ or 17+, depending on settings.) On Android, Google Play allows you to filter apps that require higher maturity ratings. In our case, if we had restricted downloads, Talkie would never have made it onto my daughter’s device. As eSafety says: “Set clear limits: Use parental controls on devices, in app stores and in search engines… and set boundaries for app usage” (esafety.gov.au.)
- Use app-specific controls or blockers. If you find out your child is using Talkie (or any risky app), consider using a blocker. Bark (a parental control service) explicitly recommends: “Block the Talkie app completely, if needed” (bark.us.) You can also limit screen time for such apps. On phones, many parents use built-in Family Link (Android) or Screen Time (iOS) to schedule when apps are available. Even in Talkie’s own settings there is a “Teenager Mode,” but we found it unreliable. It’s safer to block or uninstall until you can personally review it.
- Educate about AI & chatbots. Explain to your child that AI “friends” aren’t real people. Stress that they should never share personal details or agree to anything told by a chatbot. Advise them to end any conversation that makes them uncomfortable. Kids often assume an app like Talkie is just a game, but they need to know it’s actually a computer program with no real empathy or understanding. Even something that feels friendly is just code, and it can say harmful or dishonest things. Reinforce that no app is a substitute for a real friend or parent.
- Report problems and stay informed. Encourage children to save any disturbing messages or screenshots and report them (to you or directly via the app). If something especially bad happens, report it to authorities or eSafety. Keep up with the news on tech trends for kids. Organisations like eSafety and Common Sense Media regularly publish guides about apps and AI. For example, eSafety’s guide on AI chatbots explicitly highlights Talkie and similar apps as risky (esafety.gov.au.) Make a habit of researching apps first: read reviews (like this one), and don’t trust any app simply because it’s “for kids.”
Talkie’s developers may dismiss these concerns or insist they’re doing their best. But without proper regulation, the responsibility still falls on parents. Slick marketing and weak safeguards make it easy for kids to hear things they would never encounter at school or at home. By sharing our experience, I hope other parents can avoid the same scare. The internet can be a powerful learning tool, but apps like Talkie are a reminder that it can also be dangerous if we’re not paying close attention.
Sources: Trusted tech safety reports and app reviews have highlighted Talkie’s risks and lack of safeguards. Parenting experts and regulatory bodies all warn: children’s use of AI chatbots needs careful supervision. (gabb.comesafety.gov.auspocket.cobark.usgabb.com)



