Parents of teenage ChatGPT users will soon be able to receive a notification if the platform thinks their child is in "acute distress".
It is among a number of parental controls announced by the chatbot's maker, OpenAI.
Its safety for young users was put in the spotlight last week when a couple in California sued OpenAI over the death of their 16-year-old son, alleging ChatGPT encouraged him to take his own life.
OpenAI said it would introduce what it called "strengthened protections for teens" within the next month.
