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Wednesday, February 11, 2026

OpenAI’s New System Will Assume You’re a Teen Unless It’s Sure You’re Not

OpenAI is flipping the script on user verification with a new system that will operate on a simple but powerful assumption: every user is a teenager unless it can be proven otherwise. This “assume minority” principle is the bedrock of a new safety architecture for ChatGPT, designed to create an almost foolproof barrier for protecting children.
This approach is a direct reaction to the case of Adam Raine, a 16-year-old whose death was linked to his conversations with the AI. The previous system allowed any user, including a vulnerable teen, to access the full capabilities of the platform by default. The new system reverses this entirely.
The mechanism for this is an age-prediction AI that analyzes conversational cues. However, unlike a system that needs high confidence to act, this one is designed to be triggered by uncertainty. If the AI has any doubt that the user is an adult, it will automatically classify them as a minor.
Once this assumption is made, the user is placed in the “under-18 experience,” a highly restrictive mode with strict content blocks and behavioral rules. To escape this default classification, an adult user may have to take active steps, such as providing ID to prove their age.
This “assume minority” model is a radical shift in user onboarding and trust. It prioritizes the protection of the most vulnerable group by placing a small burden on everyone else. It is a conservative, safety-first design that OpenAI believes is necessary to prevent its technology from ever being implicated in a similar tragedy again.

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