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Parent-first safety

Kids Safety at AIStoryNest

AIStoryNest is designed for parents and caregivers creating bedtime story drafts with age-aware settings, nickname-first inputs, and visible review reminders.

Safety principles

Parent-first
Age-appropriate direction
Nickname-friendly inputs
Review before reading
Minimal personal information

What parents should know

AI stories are drafts.

Parents should review every story.

Some stories may need edits.

Parents and caregivers remain the final decision-makers.

Input privacy guidance

Use nicknames or fictional names.

Avoid full names.

Avoid exact birth dates.

Avoid school names.

Avoid addresses and private details.

Content guardrails

Use calmer themes and review every AI-generated draft.

If a theme feels unsuitable for an age-appropriate bedtime story, choose a calmer direction such as friendship, courage, animals, space, or kindness. Parents can edit or regenerate drafts before reading.

Parent checklist

Before reading aloud

FAQ

Kids safety and parent review questions.

How does AIStoryNest approach kids safety?

AIStoryNest uses a parent-first approach, age-aware settings, nickname-first inputs, and safety-conscious guardrails. Parents should review every AI-generated story before reading it to a child.

Can children use AIStoryNest on their own?

AIStoryNest is intended for parents and caregivers to use when creating and reviewing bedtime story drafts.

Why should I use a nickname instead of a real name?

Nicknames and fictional names help make a story feel personal without requiring a child’s full real identity.

What should I check before reading a story?

Check whether the story fits your child’s age, emotional needs, bedtime mood, and your family’s values. You can edit or regenerate the draft if it does not feel right.

Are all AI-generated stories age-appropriate?

Age range can help guide the story, but AI can still make mistakes. Adult review is required before reading.

Does AIStoryNest replace parents telling stories?

No. It helps parents create story drafts. The parent still chooses, reviews, edits, and reads the story.