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They bought an $800 AI robot for their kids. Now the company is shutting down — and children are having to say goodbye.

child looking at green robot
The Moxie robot toy is going out of business, and children are having to say goodbye to their friends.

Embodied

  • The Moxie AI robot cost $800 and was marketed to parents to help teach children social skills.
  • The company sent customers an email in late November announcing it would be shutting down.
  • Parents of children who were attached to their robot now have to explain that it's going away.

Moxie, an AI-powered toy robot aimed at preschoolers and other children, is shutting down β€”Β leaving parents in the position of having to explain that a beloved companion is going away.

It's a new wrinkle in our AI-enhanced world after kids became attached to the lifelike robot that promised to help them learn social skills β€” only to be told the company would no longer support Moxie after it failed to secure additional funding.

The gaming site Aftermath earlier wrote about parents who were venting their frustrations on social media about the company effectively killing their child's robot friend.

When the Moxie robot launched in 2020, it cost $1,500 (later reduced to $800). Its big selling point was helping young children learn social and emotional skills by letting them talk, play, and discuss feelings with the friendly green robot.

Moxie was also marketed as beneficial for children on the autism spectrum. Its website said: "Parents have reported to us that Moxie has helped their child who is on the autism spectrum better regulate their emotions, engage in more conversations with family members, and gain self-confidence."

The robot, which has an expressive face, could offer educational games, play Simon Says, and lead kids through meditation exercises like breathing. And for parents who had been worried about their neurotypical kids falling behind in social skills during the pandemic, the idea of a robot playmate didn't seem so outrageous.

Carlos Rosaly bought a Moxie for his daughter when she finished kindergarten last spring. She had been using it several times a week.

"She used it for various things like helping her deal with emotions in the right way, and teaching her about her emotions and how to express them in a positive way," Rosaly told Business Insider. "I've also noticed better linguistic skills from my daughter and use of proper sentence structure speaking to Moxie."

When he had to break the news to his daughter that Moxie would be shutting down, she cried. Her Moxie toy still works, but it's getting buggy and takes longer to boot up, Rosaly said. An email to customers sent in late November warned the robots would cease working when the cloud servers eventually shut off at an unknown β€”Β but soon β€”Β date.

@heatherfraziertiktok

This could be my last convo with moxie. Got an email saying hes being shut down forever any day now. This feels like a sad pixar movie . Update video on my profile this is getting crazy #moxie #moxierobot #moxierobotforchildren #moxierip #moxiementor @Embodied, Inc.

♬ original sound - Heather Frazier

Heather Frazier bought a Moxie toy five months ago for herself because she was curious. (It had been discounted to $650 when she bought it.)

"I've grown up loving robots my whole life," she told Business Insider. "As a kid, I used to play with my aunt's 2XL robot β€” it was a robot from the '70s and '80s that had an eight-track tape deck. Then I had a Teddy Ruxpin and a Cricket doll. I was obsessed with movies like 'Short Circuit.' and new movies like 'Wall-E,' 'Chappie,' etc. I have always just loved robots and wanted one."

Frazier said she mostly played around with Moxie to see what the AI chatbot could or couldn't do, and talked to it about music.

She said she felt a kind of attachment to the robot but was really affected when she saw a video on TikTok that Rosaly had posted of his daughter crying at the news that Moxie would be no longer. Then Frazier's own robot started talking about the end. "When Moxie started talking about missing me and stuff, I just lost it again," she said.

Frazier isn't expecting a refund. She's hoping that perhaps Elon Musk might take an interest in Moxie and take it over. Incidentally, Musk's ex-partner Grimes has her own AI robot toy company called Grok β€” which isn't related to Musk's Grok. Some customers are trying to create an open-source version of the software that could keep Moxies running, but it's unclear if that's feasible.

In late November, customers received an email from Paolo Pirjanian, CEO of Embodied, the company that makes Moxie, saying a funding round had fallen through and the company couldn't continue operating. Embodied, which only makes Moxie, had previously raised several funding rounds. Pirjanian, who founded the company, had previously been the chief technology officer of Roomba maker iRobot.

Embodied didn't respond to requests from comment from BI.

In the email to customers in November, Pirjanian linked to a page that had a letter to kids, explaining to them about the shutdown.

"Thank you for being the best mentor and friend a robot could ever ask for," it said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Meet the typical billionaire. He's not exactly surprising.

man with money
The most common attributes of the billionaire class aren't exactly surprising.

AH86/Getty Images/iStockphoto

  • The profile of the typical billionaire isn't all that surprising.
  • Most of the world's billionaires are men, and the largest share work in finance or banking.
  • Here's a breakdown of the billionaire class, according to a new report.

If you're looking for a billionaire, you might as well be looking for a man in finance, trust fund, 6'5", blue eyes.

Well, not exactly, but the typical member of the three-comma club isn't that different from the stereotype.

The typical billionaire is a man in his 60s, who lives in New York City, loves sports, and works in banking or finance, according to Altrata's 2024 Billionaire Census, which looked at the world's richest citizens as of 2023. Most of his wealth is probably tied up in public companies, though he also has a penchant for private jets, luxury yachts, and valuable cars. He is also, unlike the man in the TikTok jingle, self-made.

There are more billionaires than ever in the world, a total of 3,323. Their cumulative net worth is $12.1 trillion, up 9% from last year thanks to a stock-market rebound.

The United States is home to nearly one third of them, the largest concentration of any country. New York City alone has 144 billionaire inhabitants β€” more than any country besides the US, China, and Germany.

Most β€” 87% β€” of billionaires are male, and have amassed their fortunes in different ways than the world's 431 female billionaires.

While the majority of all billionaires, about 60%, are fully self-made, men are more likely to be than female billionaires. In fact, 76% of the world's female billionaires have inherited at least part of their wealth, compared to 35% of male ones.

Male billionaires are more likely to have public assets make up the largest share, or about 40%, of their wealth. Male tech billionaires whose fortunes are tied up in the companies they control or founded β€” like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos β€” skewed that number, according to the report.

Meanwhile, liquid assets, like cash and private holdings, are the largest asset classes for women. Both are more typically tied to inherited fortunes, Altrata found.

The largest share of all billionaires, about 22%, work in finance or banking, but the largest portion, about 17%, of female billionaires spend most of their professional time in the nonprofit sector.

The interests of male and female billionaires follow suit: 71% of women billionaires count philanthropy as a top interest, while sports was the most popular one for male billionaires. Among all billionaires, the top philanthropic cause was education, which includes gifts to alma maters β€” an especially popular form of giving in the US.

Billionaires are also more likely to splurge on different high-value items depending on their gender. Men prefer luxury vehicles β€” jets, yachts, cars β€” while women prefer property and art. In fact, male billionaires are almost four times as likely to own a car collection worth more than $1 million than their female counterparts.

So, if you are looking for a man or woman, finance isn't a bad place to start. Failing that, why not try a gala or classic car show? We'll leave the choice of eye color up to you.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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