The social media giant Meta just added a major safety feature to its digital assistant. When younger users have conversations that involve thoughts of suicide or hurting themselves, the company will step in. Instead of just showing crisis hotlines on the screen, the system will now send a direct notification right to a linked parent or guardian. The change aims to help families address these serious issues in real life.
Human reviewers check the flagged chats before sending parental alerts
To make this work, the platform requires families to opt into its specific supervision tools first. Once those settings are active, the artificial intelligence monitors the background chats for any signs of distress. However, a computer program does not make the final call on its own.
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The company stated that a real person will manually review every conversation flagged by the AI. This extra step helps prevent false alarms from reaching parents over harmless chats. If a reviewer decides the context is unclear, the system will still notify the parent just to be safe.
The safety rollout is currently live for users in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia. The company plans to expand this coverage to more countries later this year. Looking forward, the platform is also building a tool to contact emergency services directly if a chat suggests an immediate risk to a user’s life.
Ultimately, this update gives families a practical tool to handle difficult situations. While no monitoring program is flawless, relying on human reviewers shows a careful approach to keeping vulnerable users safe online.

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