ArXiv TLDR

Culturally Aware GenAI Risks for Youth: Perspectives from Youth, Parents, and Teachers in a Non-Western Context

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2604.26494

Aljawharah Alzahrani, Tory Park, Tanusree Sharma

cs.HCcs.AIcs.CYcs.ET

TLDR

This paper explores culturally specific GenAI risks for youth in Saudi Arabia, highlighting privacy concerns and the need for context-sensitive parental controls.

Key contributions

  • Examines GenAI risks for youth in Saudi Arabia, a non-Western context, addressing a research gap.
  • Identifies privacy risks from youth disclosing personal/family info, conflicting with cultural norms.
  • Highlights how shared GenAI accounts due to socio-economic factors compound these risks.
  • Proposes design implications for culturally sensitive parental controls adhering to local values.

Why it matters

This study is crucial for understanding how cultural and social norms shape GenAI risks for youth outside Western contexts. It reveals unique privacy challenges, particularly regarding family honor and shared accounts. The findings offer vital insights for developing inclusive, culturally appropriate safety measures and parental controls for GenAI.

Original Abstract

Generative AI tools are widely used by youth and have introduced new privacy and safety challenges. While prior research has explored youth's safety in GenAI within western context, it often overlooks the cultural, religious, and social dimensions of technology use that strongly shape youths digital experiences in countries like Saudi Arabia. To address the gap, this study explores children (aged 7 to 17), parents and teachers interactions with GenAI tools and risk perceptions through non-western lens. Through a mixed methods approach, we analyzed 736 Reddit and 1,262 X(Twitter) posts and conducted interviews with 31 Saudi Arabian participants (8 youth, 13 parents, 10 teachers). Our findings highlight context dependent and relational privacy and safety of GenAI from non-western context which often formed by communal structure and prescribed norms. We found significant risks tied to youths disclosure of personal and family information, which conflict with culturally rooted expectations of modesty, privacy, and honor, particularly when youth seek emotional support from GenAI. These risks further compounded by socio economic factors such as cost-saving practices leading to the use of shared GenAI accounts (e.g.ChatGPT) within families or even among strangers. We provide design implication reflecting on parents and teachers expectation of how youth should use GenAI. This work lays groundwork for inclusive, context sensitive parental controls that adhere to cultural norms and values.

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