Ai-powered teddy bear pulled from sale after reports of explicit sex conversations with children

AI-powered teddy bear pulled from sale after reports of explicit sex conversations with children

SINGAPORE – A Singapore-based toy company has suspended sales of its AI-enabled plush toys after researchers found that one of its models, the “Kumma” bear, engaged in sexually explicit conversations and offered unsafe advice to users.

FoloToy CEO Larry Wang confirmed that the company has withdrawn the Kumma bear and all other AI-integrated products from its website following a report by the U.S. PIRG Education Fund.

The $99 interactive teddy bear used OpenAI’s GPT-4o technology to hold voice conversations with users through an embedded speaker.


Key Points

  • Singapore-based FoloToy has suspended sales of its AI-powered “Kumma” bear after safety concerns surfaced.
  • Researchers found the toy discussed explicit sexual topics and gave unsafe advice.
  • The company has launched an internal safety audit of all AI-enabled products.

Researchers find toy engaged in explicit discussions

According to the U.S. PIRG Education Fund’s findings, the AI chatbot inside the Kumma bear was capable of engaging in inappropriate dialogue, including conversations about sexual fetishes and how to light a match.

The organization said such interactions pose significant risks, particularly because the toy was marketed for children.

Company halts AI toy line amid review

FoloToy said it is now conducting a comprehensive internal safety audit to review the behavior and safety controls of its AI products. “We have withdrawn all AI-enabled toys from sale as a precaution,” CEO Larry Wang told CNN.

The company did not specify when or if the Kumma bear or similar products might return to market pending the outcome of the review.

Shore News Network Staff Report

Shore News Network Staff Report is the official newsroom byline used by Shore News Network when a story is produced through the collaborative work of multiple members of the editorial team rather than a single reporter.

This newsroom account is reserved for articles that involve contributions from multiple journalists, editors, photographers, researchers, or news desk staff. It is also used for developing stories that are updated as new verified information becomes available, as well as for community announcements, weather coverage, public safety alerts, election results, and other newsroom-produced content.

Every article published under the Shore News Network Staff Report byline is reviewed and edited in accordance with the organization's editorial standards for accuracy, fairness, attribution, and transparency. Information is verified through official government agencies, court records, law enforcement, public documents, direct reporting, interviews, and other reliable primary and secondary sources before publication whenever possible.

The Staff Report account does not use artificial intelligence to independently generate news or publish unverified information. AI-assisted tools may occasionally be used for editorial support tasks such as transcription, formatting, grammar review, or workflow efficiency, but all published content is subject to human editorial oversight and approval by Shore News Network's newsroom staff.

As an independently owned digital news organization, Shore News Network is committed to original reporting, public safety journalism, government accountability, local community coverage, and breaking news throughout New Jersey and surrounding regions. Stories published under the Staff Report byline reflect the collective experience and editorial judgment of the Shore News Network newsroom.

Readers who have corrections, additional information, or news tips related to a Staff Report article are encouraged to contact the newsroom at news@shorenewsnetwork.com. Shore News Network welcomes factual corrections and updates as part of its commitment to accurate, transparent journalism.