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Illustration of a bright supernova-like burst streaking across a star-filled sky, with motion blur suggesting high speed in outer space.
AI space spotter on duty, that bright flash might be a supernova

12 October 2025 - AI News Quiz for Children Aged 7-11 Years Old

Welcome to the 12 October 2025 AI News Quiz for children aged 7–11. Each question is based on real stories from the past week, written in clear, friendly language. If you don’t know an answer, have a go anyway—guessing is part of the fun, and you’ll be told immediately whether you were right.

Along the way you’ll pick up quick facts about how AI is used in science, business and everyday life. Keep your eyes peeled for a few light laughs too. Ready to learn something new and have a good time? Let’s start!

1 .
Google DeepMind just introduced a new “Computer Use” model. What’s it actually for?
Let AI safely click and type on your computer to complete tasks
Teaching robots to bake perfect cupcakes
Making phone calls to your pet hamster
Replacing keyboards with musical sing along buttons
DeepMind unveiled a Computer Use model that can operate apps like a careful helper, clicking, typing, scrolling and moving files to finish tasks under safety rules. It’s meant to boost productivity, not bake cakes or chat to hamsters.
2 .
What did OpenAI boss Sam Altman say the company is focusing on right now?
Making an AI to walk your dog and brush its teeth
Shutting everything to build a space rocket
Expanding tools for businesses with new partnerships
Turning ChatGPT into a singing parrot app
In briefings that week, Sam Altman said OpenAI’s big push is helping companies use AI at work, rolling out safer, faster features and new partnerships so businesses can put AI to use. No rocket factory or parrot karaoke, just lots of enterprise tools.
3 .
What change did the UK’s medicines regulator say about clinical trial approvals this week?
They now take a whole year
They stopped using computers and will only review paper forms by post
They only approve pet medicines and put human trials on pause
They’re now about twice as fast on average
The MHRA said average approval times dropped from about 91 days to 41 days, roughly twice as fast, thanks to process reforms and smarter digital tools, including AI. Faster approvals mean people can try promising treatments sooner, while the tough safety checks stay in place.
4 .
Elon Musk’s AI company xAI says it’s building “world models.” What does that mean?
Tiny globes you can keep as pencil toppers
AI that learns how the real world works so it can plan and move in it
A fashion show for robots that like capes
Maps of every playground slide on Earth
The Financial Times reported xAI is hiring and racing to make world models, AIs that understand physics and cause and effect so they can plan moves in games, robotics and real spaces. That’s far beyond chatting, which is why B is the right pick here.
5 .
Which company did OpenAI make a huge new chip deal with to power future AI?
AMD
Lego
Intel
The Biscuit Factory down the road
OpenAI struck a major multi year deal with AMD for graphics chips to train and run AI. The agreement even includes a warrant letting OpenAI buy a chunk of AMD shares if milestones are met. More chips = faster, smarter models, no biscuits involved.
6 .
UK scientists tested an AI “space spotter.” What cool thing did it learn to do?
Count every star by singing them a lullaby
Draw perfect pictures of alien jellyfish
Spot real sky events like exploding stars using just a few examples
Turn the Moon into a giant night light switch
A University of Oxford team showed Gemini could tell real sky changes, like a supernova, from false alarms using only a handful of example images, and even explain its reasoning. That helps astronomers react quickly when something truly exciting appears.
7 .
What did the UK government say about police using live facial recognition?
Ban all cameras at football matches
Roll it out everywhere straight away
Put the ice cream van in charge of it
Ask the public first and set clear rules before expanding it
The policing minister said the government will hold a public consultation and set clear parameters for when and how live facial recognition can be used before any wider rollout. So, no instant switch on everywhere, safeguards and guidance come first.
8 .
After a big UK decision about Google Search, what might you soon see when you first try to search on a new device?
A dancing dinosaur that quizzes you on maths
A screen that lets you pick your search engine
A rule that only cat videos are allowed
A pop up that tells you to brush your teeth
The CMA designated Google’s search services with Strategic Market Status, enabling remedies like a choice screen so people can pick alternatives including AI powered search when setting up devices. It’s about fairness and options, not tooth brushing pop ups.
9 .
What did the Bank of England’s boss say the UK should do about AI?
Take a pragmatic, open minded approach and manage risks
Ban all AI until robots can make tea properly
Let AI run the economy with zero rules
Pretend AI is a fad and ignore it
Governor Andrew Bailey urged a practical approach to AI, understand what it can and can’t do, then manage genuine risks rather than panicking or looking away. That means careful rules, not a total ban or a free for all.
10 .
Which AI company said it will open its first office in India in 2026?
OpenAI
xAI
Anthropic
Google DeepMind
Anthropic said it will open its first India office in Bengaluru in early 2026 to meet growing demand for its Claude AI tools. It’s a sign of AI’s global spread, closer to customers, more local jobs, and better support. This one’s Anthropic, not OpenAI or xAI.
Author:  Tara Kemp

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