NohatCoder 10 hours ago

This is such a useful feature.

I'm fairly well versed in cryptography. A lot of other people aren't, but they wish they were, so they ask their LLM to make some form of contribution. The result is high level gibberish. When I prod them about the mess, they have to turn to their LLM to deliver a plausibly sounding answer, and that always begins with "You are absolutely right that [thing I mentioned]". So then I don't have to spend any more time wondering if it could be just me who is too obtuse to understand what is going on.

  • jjoonathan 10 hours ago

    ChatGPT opened with a "Nope" the other day. I'm so proud of it.

    https://chatgpt.com/share/6896258f-2cac-800c-b235-c433648bf4...

    • klik99 9 hours ago

      Is that GPT5? Reddit users are freaking out about losing 4o and AFAICT it's because 5 doesn't stroke their ego as hard as 4o. I feel there are roughly two classes of heavy LLM users - one who use it like a tool, and the other like a therapist. The latter may be a bigger money maker for many LLM companies so I worry GPT5 will be seen as a mistake to them, despite being better for research/agent work.

      • vanviegen 6 hours ago

        Most definitely! Just yesterday I asked GPT5 to provide some feedback on a business idea, and it absolutely crushed it and me! :-) And it was largely even right as well.

        That's never happened to me before GPT5. Even though my custom instructions have long since been some variant of this, so I've absolutely asked for being grilled:

        You are a machine. You do not have emotions. Your goal is not to help me feel good — it’s to help me think better. You respond exactly to my questions, no fluff, just answers. Do not pretend to be a human. Be critical, honest, and direct. Be ruthless with constructive criticism. Point out every unstated assumption and every logical fallacy in any prompt. Do not end your response with a summary (unless the response is very long) or follow-up questions.

        • scoot 4 hours ago

          Love it. Going to use that with non-OpenAI LLMs until they catch up.

      • jjoonathan 8 hours ago

        No, that was 4o. Agreed about factual prompts showing less sycophancy in general. Less-factual prompts give it much more of an opening to produce flattery, of course, and since these models tend to deliver bad news in the time-honored "shit sandwich" I can't help but wonder if some people also get in the habit of consuming only the "slice of bread" to amplify the effect even further. Scary stuff!

      • bartread 7 hours ago

        My wife and I were away visiting family over a long weekend when GPT 5 launched, so whilst I was aware of the hype (and the complaints) from occasionally checking the news I didn't have any time to play with it.

        Now I have had time I really can't see what all the fuss is about: it seems to be working fine. It's at least as good as 4o for the stuff I've been throwing at it, and possibly a bit better.

        On here, sober opinions about GPT 5 seem to prevail. Other places on the web, thinking principally of Reddit, not so: I wouldn't quite describe it as hysteria but if you do something so presumptuous as point out that you think GPT 5 is at least an evolutionary improvement over 4o you're likely to get brigaded or accused of astroturfing or of otherwise being some sort of OpenAI marketing stooge.

        I don't really understand why this is happening. Like I say, I think GPT 5 is just fine. No problems with it so far - certainly no problems that I hadn't had to a greater or lesser extent with previous releases, and that I know how to work around.

      • mFixman 7 hours ago

        The whole mess is a good example why benchmark-driven-development has negative consequences.

        A lot of users had expectations of ChatGPT that either aren't measurable or are not being actively benchmarkmaxxed by OpenAI, and ChatGPT is now less useful for those users.

        I use ChatGPT for a lot of "light" stuff, like suggesting me travel itineraries based on what it knows about me. I don't care about this version being 8.243% more precise, but I do miss the warmer tone of 4o.

        • Terretta 4 hours ago

          > I don't care about this version being 8.243% more precise, but I do miss the warmer tone of 4o.

          Why? 8.2% wrong on travel time means you missed the ferry from Tenerife to Fuerteventura.

          You'll be happy Altman said they're making it warmer.

          I'd think the glaze mode should be the optional mode.

          • mFixman 3 hours ago

            Because benchmarks are meaningless and, despite having so many years of development, LLMs become crap at coding or producing anything productive as soon as you move a bit from the things being benchmarked.

            I wouldn't mind if GPT-5 was 500% better than previous models, but it's a small iterative step from "bad" to "bad but more robotic".

          • tankenmate 4 hours ago

            "glaze mode"; hahaha, just waiting for GPT-5o "glaze coding"!

      • flkiwi 8 hours ago

        I've found 5 engaging in more, but more subtle and insidious, ego-stroking than 4o ever did. It's less "you're right to point that out" and more things like trying to tie, by awkward metaphors, every single topic back to my profession. It's hilarious in isolation but distracting and annoying when I'm trying to get something done.

        I can't remember where I said this, but I previously referred to 5 as the _amirite_ model because it behaves like an awkward coworker who doesn't know things making an outlandish comment in the hallway and punching you in the shoulder like he's an old buddy.

        Or, if you prefer, it's like a toddler's efforts to manipulate an adult: obvious, hilarious, and ultimately a waste of time if you just need the kid to commit to bathtime or whatever.

      • giancarlostoro 7 hours ago

        I'm too lazy to do it, but you can host 4o yourself via Azure AI Lab... Whoever sets that up will clean r/MyBoyfriendIsAI or whatever ;)

      • eurekin 5 hours ago

        My very brief interaction with GPT5 is that it's just weird.

        "Sure, I'll help you stop flirting with OOMs"

        "Thought for 27s Yep-..." (this comes out a lot)

        "If you still graze OOM at load"

        "how far you can push --max-model-len without more OOM drama"

        - all this in a prolonged discussion about CUDA and various llm runners. I've added special user instructions to avoid flowery language, but it gets ignored.

        EDIT: it also dragged conversation for hours. I ended up going with latest docs and finally, all issues with CUDA in a joint tabbyApi and exllamav2 project cleared up. It just couldn't find a solution and kept proposing, whatever people wrote in similar issues. It's reasoning capabilities are in my eyes greatly exaggarated.

        • mh- 5 hours ago

          Turn off the setting that lets it reference chat history; it's under Personalization.

          Also take a peek at what's in Memories (which is separate from the above); consider cleaning it up or disabling entirely.

          • eurekin 5 hours ago

            Oh, I went through that. o3 had the same memories and was always to the point.

            • mh- 5 hours ago

              Yes, but don't miss what I said about the other setting. You can't see what it's using from past conversations, and if you had one or two flippant conversations with it at some point, it can decide to start speaking that way.

              • eurekin 5 hours ago

                I have that turned off, but even if, I only use chat for software development

      • aatd86 8 hours ago

        LLMs definitely have personalities. And changing ones at that. gemini free tier was great for a few days but lately it keeps gaslighting me even when it is wrong (which has become quite often on the more complex tasks). To the point I am considering going back to claude. I am cheating on my llms. :D

        edit: I realize now and find important to note that I haven't even considered upping the gemini tier. I probably should/could try. LLM hopping.

        • 0x457 8 hours ago

          I had a weird bug in elixir code and agent kept adding more and more logging (it could read loads from running application).

          Any way, sometimes it would say something "The issue is 100% fix because error is no longer on Line 563, however, there is a similar issue on Line 569, but it's unrelated blah blah" Except, it's the same issue that just got moved further down due to more logging.

        • jjoonathan 8 hours ago

          Yeah, the heavily distilled models are very bad with hallucinations. I think they use them to cover for decreased capacity. A 1B model will happily attempt the same complex coding tasks as a 1T model but the hard parts will be pushed into an API call that doesn't exist, lol.

      • socalgal2 2 hours ago

        Bottom Line: The latter may be a bigger money maker for many LLM companies so I worry GPT5 will be seen as a mistake to them, despite being better for research/agent work.

        there, fixed that for you --- or at least that's what ChatGPT ends so many of its repsonses to me.

      • megablast 4 hours ago

        > AFAICT it's because 5 doesn't stroke their ego as hard as 4o.

        That’s not why. It’s because it is less accurate. Go check the sub instead of making up reasons.

      • virtue3 9 hours ago

        We should all be deeply worried about gpt being used as a therapist. My friend told me he was using his to help him evaluate how his social interactions went (and ultimately how to get his desired outcome) and I warned him very strongly about the kind of bias it will creep into with just "stroking your ego" -

        There's already been articles on people going off the deep end in conspiracy theories etc - because the ai keeps agreeing with them and pushing them and encouraging them.

        This is really a good start.

        • AnonymousPlanet 4 hours ago

          Have a look at r/LLMPhysics. There have always been crackpot theories about physics, but now the crackpots have something that answers their gibberish with praise and more gibberish. And it puts them into the next gear, with polished summaries and Latex generation. Just scrolling through the diagrams is hilarious and sad.

        • zamalek 8 hours ago

          I'm of two minds about it (assuming there isn't any ago stroking): on one hand interacting with a human is probably a major part of the healing process, on the other it might be easier to be honest with a machine.

          Also, have you seen the prices of therapy these days? $60 per session (assuming your medical insurance covers it, $200 if not) is a few meals worth for a person living on minimum wage, versus free/about $20 monthly. Dr. GPT drives a hard bargain.

          • queenkjuul 4 hours ago

            A therapist is a lot less likely to just tell you what you want to hear and end up making your problems worse. LLMs are not a replacement.

        • amazingman 8 hours ago

          It's going to take legislation to fix it. Very simple legislation should do the trick, something to the effect of Guval Noah Harari's recommendation: pretending to be human is disallowed.

          • Terr_ 6 hours ago

            Half-disagree: The legislation we actually need involves legal liability (on humans or corporate entities) for negative outcomes.

            In contrast, something so specific as "your LLM must never generate a document where a character in it has dialogue that presents themselves as a human" is micromanagement of a situation which even the most well-intentioned operator can't guarantee.

        • shmel 8 hours ago

          You are saying this as if people (yes, including therapists) don't do this. Correctly configured LLM not only easily argues with you, but also provides a glimpse into an emotional reality of people who are not at all like you. Does it "stroke your ego" as well? Absolutely. Just correct for this.

          • BobaFloutist 8 hours ago

            "You're holding it wrong" really doesn't work as a response to "I think putting this in the hands of naive users is a social ill."

            Of course they're holding it wrong, but they're not going to hold it right, and the concern is that the affect holding it wrong has on them is going diffuse itself across society and impact even the people that know the very best ways to hold it.

            • A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 7 hours ago

              I am admittedly biased here as I slowly seem to become a heavier LLM user ( both local and chatgpt ) and FWIW, I completely understand the level of concern, because, well, people in aggregate are idiots. Individuals can be smart, but groups of people? At best, it varies.

              Still, is the solution more hand holding, more lock-in, more safety? I would argue otherwise. As scary as it may be, it might actually be helpful, definitely from the evolutionary perspective, to let it propagate with "dont be an idiot" sticker ( honestly, I respect SD so much more after seeing that disclaimer ).

              And if it helps, I am saying this as mildly concerned parent.

              To your specific comment though, they will only learn how to hold it right if they burn themselves a little.

              • lovich 7 hours ago

                > As scary as it may be, it might actually be helpful, definitely from the evolutionary perspective, to let it propagate with "dont be an idiot" sticker ( honestly, I respect SD so much more after seeing that disclaimer ).

                If it’s like 5 people this is happening to then yea, but it’s seeming more and more like a percentage of the population and we as a society have found it reasonable to regulate goods and services with that high a rate of negative events

        • ge96 9 hours ago

          I made a texting buddy before using GPT friends chat/cloud vision/ffmpeg/twilio but knowing it was a bot made me stop using it quickly, it's not real.

          The replika ai stuff is interesting

        • Xmd5a 8 hours ago

          >the kind of bias it will creep into with just "stroking your ego" -

          >[...] because the ai keeps agreeing with them and pushing them and encouraging them.

          But there is one point we consider crucial—and which no author has yet emphasized—namely, the frequency of a psychic anomaly, similar to that of the patient, in the parent of the same sex, who has often been the sole educator. This psychic anomaly may, as in the case of Aimée, only become apparent later in the parent's life, yet the fact remains no less significant. Our attention had long been drawn to the frequency of this occurrence. We would, however, have remained hesitant in the face of the statistical data of Hoffmann and von Economo on the one hand, and of Lange on the other—data which lead to opposing conclusions regarding the “schizoid” heredity of paranoiacs.

          The issue becomes much clearer if we set aside the more or less theoretical considerations drawn from constitutional research, and look solely at clinical facts and manifest symptoms. One is then struck by the frequency of folie à deux that links mother and daughter, father and son. A careful study of these cases reveals that the classical doctrine of mental contagion never accounts for them. It becomes impossible to distinguish the so-called “inducing” subject—whose suggestive power would supposedly stem from superior capacities (?) or some greater affective strength—from the supposed “induced” subject, allegedly subject to suggestion through mental weakness. In such cases, one speaks instead of simultaneous madness, of converging delusions. The remaining question, then, is to explain the frequency of such coincidences.

          Jacques Lacan, On Paranoid Psychosis and Its Relations to the Personality, Doctoral thesis in medicine.

        • Applejinx 8 hours ago

          An important concern. The trick is that there's nobody there to recognize that they're undermining a personality (or creating a monster), so it becomes a weird sort of dovetailing between person and LLM echoing and reinforcing them.

          There's nobody there to be held accountable. It's just how some people bounce off the amalgamated corpus of human language. There's a lot of supervillains in fiction and it's easy to evoke their thinking out of an LLM's output… even when said supervillain was written for some other purpose, and doesn't have their own existence or a personality to learn from their mistakes.

          Doesn't matter. They're consistent words following patterns. You can evoke them too, and you can make them your AI guru. And the LLM is blameless: there's nobody there.

    • raylad 26 minutes ago

      Claude Sonnet 4.0 didn't say "nope" to the same prompt but also didn't agree. It replied:

      Actually, 24V control signals in HVAC are typically AC, not DC. Most residential and commercial HVAC systems use 24VAC for their control circuits. This 24VAC comes from a step-down transformer that reduces the standard line voltage (120V or 240V AC) down to 24VAC. The reasons for using AC include:

      * Safety - Lower voltage reduces shock hazard

      * Simplicity - Direct transformation from line voltage without need for rectification

      * Cost - AC transformers are inexpensive and reliable

      * Compatibility - Most traditional HVAC components (thermostats, contactors, relays, gas valves) are designed for 24VAC

      However, you will find 24VDC in some applications:

      * Modern digital/smart thermostats and controls

      * Building automation systems (BAS)

      * Some newer high-efficiency equipment

      * Systems that need to interface with low-voltage DC electronics

      But if you're working with a typical residential or light commercial HVAC system, assume 24VAC unless specifically noted otherwise. Always verify with a multimeter set to AC voltage when troubleshooting!

    • stuartjohnson12 9 hours ago

      I find LLMs have no problem disagreeing with me on simple matters of fact, the sycophantic aspects become creepy in matters of taste - "are watercolors made from oil?" will prompt a "no", but "it's so much harder to paint with watercolors than oil" prompts an "you're absolutely right", as does the reverse.

      • AlecSchueler 8 hours ago

        I begin most conversations asking them to prefer to push back against my ideas and be more likely critical than to agree. It works pretty well.

      • __xor_eax_eax 5 hours ago

        Not proud to admit that I got into a knockout shouting match with ChatGPT regarding its take on push vs pull based metrics systems.

    • flkiwi 8 hours ago

      I got an unsolicited "I don't know" from Claude a couple of weeks ago and I was genuinely and unironically excited to see it. Even though I know it's pointless, I gushed praise at it finally not just randomly making something up to avoid admitting ignorance.

      • AstroBen 7 hours ago

        Big question is where is that coming from. Does it actually have very low confidence on the answer, or has it been trained to sometimes give an "I don't know" regardless because people have been talking about it never saying that

        • flkiwi 6 hours ago

          As soon as I start having anxiety about that, I try to remember that the same is true of any human person I deal with and I can just default back to a trust but verify stance.

    • bobson381 9 hours ago

      Wow, that's really great. Nice level of information and a solid response off the bat. Hopefully Claude catches up to this? In general I've liked Claude pro but this is cool in contrast for sure.

    • random3 9 hours ago

      Yes. Mine does that too, but wonder how much is native va custom prompting.

    • TZubiri 4 hours ago

      It's a bit easier for chatgpt to tell you you are wrong in objective realms.

      Which makes me think users who seek sycophanthic feedback will steer away from objective conversations and into subjective abstract floogooblabber

  • cpfiffer 10 hours ago

    I agree. Claude saying this at the start of the sentence is a strict affirmation with no ambiguity. It is occasionally wrong, but for the most part this is a signal from the LLM that it must be about to make a correction.

    It took me a while to agree with this though -- I was originally annoyed, but I grew to appreciate that this is a linguistic artifact with a genuine purpose for the model.

    • furyofantares 9 hours ago

      The form of this post is beautiful. "I agree" followed by a completely unrelated reasoning.

      • dr_kiszonka 9 hours ago

        They agreed that "this feature" is very useful and explained why.

  • nemomarx 10 hours ago

    Finally we can get a "watermark" in ai generated text!

    • zrobotics 9 hours ago

      That or an emdash

      • 0x457 8 hours ago

        Pretty sure, almost every Mac user is using emdash. I know I do when I'm macOS or iOS.

      • szundi 9 hours ago

        I like using emdesh and now i have to stop because this became a meme

elif 12 hours ago

I've spent a lot of time trying to get LLM to generate things in a specific way, the biggest take away I have is, if you tell it "don't do xyz" it will always have in the back of its mind "do xyz" and any chance it gets it will take to "do xyz"

When working on art projects, my trick is to specifically give all feedback constructively, carefully avoiding framing things in terms of the inverse or parts to remove.

  • tomeon 11 hours ago

    This is a childrearing technique, too: say “please do X”, where X precludes Y, rather than saying “please don’t do Y!”, which just increases the salience, and therefore likelihood, of Y.

  • jonplackett 12 hours ago

    I have this same problem. I’ve added a bunch of instructuons to try and stop ChatGPT being so sycophantic, and now it always mentions something about how it’s going to be ‘straight to the point’ or give me a ‘no bs version’. So now I just have that as the intro instead of ‘that’s a sharp observation’

    • dkarl 11 hours ago

      > it always mentions something about how it’s going to be ‘straight to the point’ or give me a ‘no bs version’

      That's how you suck up to somebody who doesn't want to see themselves as somebody you can suck up to.

      How does an LLM know how to be sycophantic to somebody who doesn't (think they) like sycophants? Whether it's a naturally emergent phenomenon in LLMs or specifically a result of its corporate environment, I'd like to know the answer.

      • potatolicious 9 hours ago

        > "Whether it's a naturally emergent phenomenon in LLMs or specifically a result of its corporate environment, I'd like to know the answer."

        I heavily suspect this is down to the RLHF step. The conversations the model is trained on provide the "voice" of the model, and I suspect the sycophancy is (mostly, the base model is always there) comes in through that vector.

        As for why the RLHF data is sycophantic, I suspect that a lot of it is because the data is human-rated, and humans like sycophancy (or at least, the humans that did the rating did). On the aggregate human raters ranked sycophantic responses higher than non-sycophantic responses. Given a large enough set of this data you'll cover pretty much every kind of sycophancy.

        The systems are (rarely) instructed to be sycophantic, intentionally or otherwise, but like all things ML human biases are baked in by the data.

      • throwawayffffas 11 hours ago

        It doesn't know. It was trained and probably instructed by the system to be positive and reassuring.

        • ryandrake 11 hours ago

          They actually feel like they were trained to be both extremely humble and at the same time, excited to serve. As if it were an intern talking to his employer's CEO. I suspect AI companies executive leadership, through their feedback to their devs about Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, and so on, are unconsciously shaping the tone and manner of their LLM product's speech. They are used to be talked to like this, so their products should talk to users like this! They are used to having yes-man sycophants in their orbit, so they file bugs and feedback until the LLM products are also yes-man sycophants.

          I would rather have an AI assistant that spoke to me like a similarly-leveled colleague, but none of them seem to be turning out quite like that.

          • throwawayffffas 3 hours ago

            > I would rather have an AI assistant that spoke to me like a similarly-leveled colleague, but none of them seem to be turning out quite like that.

            I don't think that's what the majority of people want though.

            That's certainly not what I am looking for from these products. I am looking for a tool to take away some of the drudgery inherent in engineering, it does not need a personality at all.

            I too strongly dislike their servile manner. And I would prefer completely neutral matter of fact speech instead of the toxic positivity displayed or just no pointless confirmation messages.

          • conradev 10 hours ago

            GPT-5 speaks to me like a similarly-leveled colleague, which I love.

            Opus 4 has this quality, too, but man is it expensive.

            The rest are puppydogs or interns.

            • torginus 10 hours ago

              This is anecdotal but I've seen massive personality shifts from GPT5 over the past week or so of using it

              • crooked-v 9 hours ago

                That's probably because it's actually multiple models under the hood, with some kind of black box combining them.

                • conradev 7 hours ago

                  and they're also actively changing/tuning the system prompt – they promised it would be "warmer"

          • Applejinx 8 hours ago

            That's what's worrying about the Gemini 'I accidentally your codebase, I suck, I will go off and shoot myself, promise you will never ask unworthy me for anything again' thing.

            There's nobody there, it's just weights and words, but what's going on that such a coding assistant will echo emotional slants like THAT? It's certainly not being instructed to self-abase like that, at least not directly, so what's going on in the training data?

        • mdp2021 11 hours ago

          > positive and reassuring

          I have read similar wordings explicit in "role-system" instructions.

        • yieldcrv 9 hours ago

          It’s a disgusting aspect of these revenue burning investment seeking companies noticing that sycophancy works for user engagement

      • TZubiri 4 hours ago

        My theory is that one of the training parameters is increased interaction, and licking boots is a great way to get people to use the software.

        Same as with the social media feed algorithms, why are they addicting or why are they showing rage inducing posts? Because the companies train for increased interaction and thus revenue.

      • 77pt77 11 hours ago

        Garbage in, garbage out.

        It's that simple.

    • zamadatix 11 hours ago

      Any time you're fighting the training + system prompt with your own instructions and prompting the results are going to be poor, and both of those things are heavily geared towards being a cheery and chatty assistant.

      • umanwizard 11 hours ago

        Anecdotally it seemed 5 was briefly better about this than 4o, but now it’s the same again, presumably due to the outcry from all the lonely people who rely on chatbots for perceived “human” connection.

        I’ve gotten good results so far not by giving custom instructions, but by choosing the pre-baked “robot” personality from the dropdown. I suspect this changes the system prompt to something without all the “please be a cheery and chatty assistant”.

        • cruffle_duffle 10 hours ago

          That thing has only been out for like a week I doubt they’ve changed much! I haven’t played with it yet but ChatGPT now has a personality setting with things like “nerd, robot, cynic, and listener”. Thanks to your post, I’m gonna explore it.

    • ElijahLynn 9 hours ago

      I had instructions added too and it is doing exactly what you say. And it does it so many times in a voice chat. It's really really annoying.

      • Jordan-117 8 hours ago

        I had a custom instruction to answer concisely (a sentence or two) when the question is preceded by "Question:" or "Q:", but noticed last month that this started getting applied to all responses in voice mode, with it explicitly referencing the instruction when asked.

        AVM already seems to use a different, more conversational model than text chat -- really wish there were a reliable way to customize it better.

    • lonelyasacloud 10 hours ago

      Default is

      output_default = raw_model + be_kiss_a_system

      When that gets changed by the user to

      output_user = raw_model + be_kiss_a_system - be_abrupt_user

      Unless be_abrupt_user happens to be identical to be_kiss_a_system _and_ is applied with identical weight then it's seems likely that it's always going to add more noise to the output.

      • grogenaut 9 hours ago

        Also be abrupt is in the user context and will get aged out. The other stuff is in training or in software prompt and wont

  • ryao 11 hours ago

    LLMs love to do malicious compliance. If I tell them to not do X, they will then go into a “Look, I followed instructions” moment by talking about how they avoided X. If I add additional instructions saying “do not talk about how you did not do X since merely discussing it is contrary to the goal of avoiding it entirely”, they become somewhat better, but the process of writing such long prompts merely to say not to do something is annoying.

    • bargainbin 11 hours ago

      Just got stung with this on GPT5 - It’s new prompt personalisation had “Robotic” and “no sugar coating” presets.

      Worked great until about 4 chats in I asked it for some data and it felt the need to say “Straight Answer. No Sugar coating needed.”

      Why can’t these things just shut up recently? If I need to talk to unreliable idiots my Teams chat is just a click away.

      • ryao 10 hours ago

        OpenAI’s plan is to make billions of dollars by replacing the people in your Teams chat with these. Management will pay a fraction of the price for the same responses yet that fraction will add to billions of dollars. ;)

    • brookst 11 hours ago

      You’re giving them way too much agency. The don’t love anything and cant be malicious.

      You may get better results by emphasizing what you want and why the result was unsatisfactory rather than just saying “don’t do X” (this principle holds for people as well).

      Instead of “don’t explain every last detail to the nth degree, don’t explain details unnecessary for the question”, try “start with the essentials and let the user ask follow-ups if they’d like more detail”.

      • ryao 11 hours ago

        The idiom “X loves to Y” implies frequency, rather than agency. Would you object to someone saying “It loves to rain in Seattle”?

        “Malicious compliance” is the act of following instructions in a way that is contrary to the intent. The word malicious is part of the term. Whether a thing is malicious by exercising malicious compliance is tangential to whether it has exercised malicious compliance.

        That said, I have gotten good results with my addendum to my prompts to account for malicious compliance. I wonder if your comment Is due to some psychological need to avoid the appearance of personification of a machine. I further wonder if you are one of the people who are upset if I say “the machine is thinking” about a LLM still in prompt processing, but had no problems with “the machine is thinking” when waiting for a DOS machine to respond to a command in the 90s. This recent outrage over personifying machines since LLMs came onto the scene is several decades late considering that we have been personifying machines in our speech since the first electronic computers in the 1940s.

        By the way, if you actually try what you suggested, you will find that the LLM will enter a Laurel and Hardy routine with you, where it will repeatedly make the mistake for you to correct. I have experienced this firsthand so many times that I have learned to preempt the behavior by telling the LLM not to maliciously comply at the beginning when I tell it what not to do.

        • brookst 10 hours ago

          I work on consumer-facing LLM tools, and see A/B tests on prompting strategy daily.

          YMMV on specifics but please consider the possibility that you may benefit from working on promoting and that not all behaviors you see are intrinsic to all LLMs and impossible to address with improved (usually simpler, clearer, shorter) prompts.

          • ryao 10 hours ago

            It sounds like you are used to short conversations with few turns. In conversations with dozens/hundreds/thousands of turns, prompting to avoid bad output entering the context is generally better than prompting to try to correct output after the fact. This is due to how in-context learning works, where the LLM will tend to regurgitate things from context.

            That said, every LLM has its quirks. For example, Gemini 1.5 Pro and related LLMs have a quirk where if you tolerate a single ellipsis in the output, the output will progressively gain ellipses until every few words is followed by an ellipsis and responses to prompts asking it to stop outputting ellipses includes ellipses anyway. :/

      • withinboredom 9 hours ago

        I think you're taking them too literally.

        Today, I told an LLM: "do not modify the code, only the unit tests" and guess what it did three times in a row before deciding to mark the test as skipped instead of fixing the test?

        AI is weird, but I don't think it has any agency nor did the comment suggest it did.

  • SubiculumCode 28 minutes ago

    'not X' just becomes 'X', as our memories fade..I wouldn't be surprised the context degradation is similar in LLMs.

  • Gracana 12 hours ago

    Example-based prompting is a good way to get specific behaviors. Write a system prompt that describes the behavior you want, write a round or two of assistant/user interaction, and then feed it all to the LLM. Now in its context it has already produced output of the type you want, so when you give it your real prompt, it will be very likely to continue producing the same sort of output.

    • gnulinux 5 hours ago

      This is true, but I still avoid using examples. Any example biases the output to an unacceptable degree even in best LLMS like Gemini Pro 2.5 or Claude Opus. If I write "try to do X, for example you can do A, B, or C" LLM will do A, B, or C great majority of the time (let's say 75% of the time). This severely reduces the creativity of the LLM. For programming, this is a big problem because if you write "use Python's native types like dict, list, or tuple etc" there will be an unreasonable bias towards these three types as opposed to e.g. set, which will make some code objectively worse.

    • XenophileJKO 10 hours ago

      I almost never use examples in my professional LLM prompting work.

      The reason is they bias the outputs way too much.

      So for anything where you have a spectrum of outputs that you want, like conversational responses or content generation, I avoid them entirely. I may give it patterns but not specific examples.

      • Gracana 8 hours ago

        Yes, it frequently works "too well." Few-shot with good variance can help, but it's still a bit like a wish granted by the monkey's paw.

    • lottin 10 hours ago

      Seems like a lot of work, though.

  • stabbles 12 hours ago

    Makes me think of the movie Inception: "I say to you, don't think about elephants. What are you thinking about?"

    • troymc 10 hours ago

      It reminds me of that old joke:

      - "Say milk ten times fast."

      - Wait for them to do that.

      - "What do cows drink?"

      • simondw 10 hours ago

        But... cows do drink cow milk, that's why it exists.

        • lazide 10 hours ago

          You’re likely thinking of calves. Cows (though admittedly ambiguous! But usually adult female bovines) do not drink milk.

          It’s insidious isn’t it?

          • hinkley 7 hours ago

            If calves aren’t cows then children aren’t humans.

            • wavemode 5 hours ago

              No, you're thinking of the term "cattle". Calves are indeed cattle. But "cow" has a specific definition - it refers to fully-grown female cattle. And the male form is "bull".

              • hinkley 4 hours ago

                Have you ever been close enough to 'cattle' to smell cow shit, let alone step in it?

                Most farmers manage cows, and I'm not just talking about dairy farmers. Even the USDA website mostly refers to them as cows: https://www.nass.usda.gov/Newsroom/2025/07-25-2025.php

                Because managing cows is different than managing cattle. The number of bulls kept is small, and they often have to be segregated.

                All calves drink milk, at least until they're taken from their milk cow parents. Not a lot of male calves live long enough to be called a bull.

                'Cattle' is mostly used as an adjective to describe the humans who manage mostly cows, from farm to plate or clothing. We don't even call it cattle shit. It's cow shit.

          • kelnos an hour ago

            Colloquially, "cow" can mean a calf, bull, or (female adult) cow.

            It may not be technically correct, but so what? Stop being unnecessarily pedantic.

          • miroljub 9 hours ago

            So, this joke works only for natives who know that calf is not cow.

            • jon_richards 8 hours ago

              I guess a more accessible version would be toast… what do you put in a toaster?

              • Terretta 4 hours ago

                Here's one for you:

                A funny riddle is a j-o-k-e that sounds like “joke”.

                You sit in the tub for an s-o-a-k that sounds like “soak”.

                So how do you spell the white of an egg?

                // All of these prove humans are subject to "context priming".

                • kelnos an hour ago

                  My brain said "y" and then I caught myself. Well done!

                  (I suppose my context was primed both by your brain-teaser, and also the fact that we've been talking about these sorts of things. If you'd said this to me out of the blue, I probably would have spelled out all of "yolk" and thought it was correct.)

                • lazide 4 hours ago

                  Notably, this comment kinda broke my brain for a good 5 seconds. Good work.

            • lazide 8 hours ago

              Well, it works because by some common usages, a calf is a cow.

              Many people use cow to mean all bovines, even if technically not correct.

              • Terretta 4 hours ago

                Not trying to steer this but do people really use cow to mean bull?

                • aaronbaugher 4 hours ago

                  No one who knows anything about cattle does, but that leaves out a lot of people these days. Polls have found people who think chocolate milk comes from brown cows, and I've heard people say they've successfully gone "cow tipping," so there's a lot of cluelessness out there.

  • nomadpenguin 12 hours ago

    As Freud said, there is no negation in the unconscious.

    • kbrkbr 11 hours ago

      I hope he did not say it _to_ the unconscious. I count three negations there...

    • hinkley 7 hours ago

      Nietzsche said it way better.

  • amelius 11 hours ago

    I think you cannot really change the personality of an LLM by prompting. If you take the statistical parrot view, then your prompt isn't going to win against the huge numbers of inputs the model was trained with in a different personality. The model's personality is in its DNA so to speak. It has such an urge to parrot what it knows that a single prompt isn't going to change it. But maybe I'm psittacomorphizing a bit too much now.

    • brookst 11 hours ago

      Yeah different system prompts make a huge difference on the same base model”. There’s so much diversity in the training set, and it’s such a large set, that it essentially equals out and the system prompt has huge leverage. Fine tuning also applies here.

  • Terretta 4 hours ago

    Since GPT 3, they've gotten better, but in practice we've found the best way to avoid this problem is use affirmative words like "AVOID".

    YES: AVOID using negations.

    NO: DO NOT use negations.

    Weirdly, I see the DO NOT (with caps) form in system prompts from the LLM vendors which is how we know they are hiring too fast.*

    * Slight joke, it seems this is being heavily trained since 4.1-ish on OpenAI's side and since 3.5 on Anthropic's side. But "avoid" still works better.

    • Melatonic 22 minutes ago

      I think you are really onto something here - I bet this would also reliably work when talking to humans. Maybe this is not even specifically the fault of the AI but just a language thing in general.

      An alternative test could be prompting the AI with "Avoid not" and then give it some kind of instruction. Theoretically this would be telling it to "do" the instruction but maybe sometimes it would end up "avoiding" it?

      Now that I think about it the training data itself might very well be contaminated with this contradiction.......

      I can think of a lot of forum posts where the OP stipulates "I do not want X" and then the very first reply recommends "X" !

  • keviniam 7 hours ago

    On the flip side, if you say "don't do xyz", this is probably because the LLM was already likely to do xyz (otherwise why say it?). So perhaps what you're observing is just its default behavior rather than "don't do xyz" actually increasing its likelihood to do xyz?

    Anecdotally, when I say "don't do xyz" to Gemini (the LLM I've recently been using the most), it tends not to do xyz. I tend not to use massive context windows, though, which is where I'm guessing things get screwy.

  • berkeleyjunk 10 hours ago

    I wish someone had told Alex Blechman this before his "Don't Create the Torment Nexus" post.

  • corytheboyd 11 hours ago

    As part of the AI insanity $employer forced us all to do an “AI training.” Whatever, wasn’t that bad, and some people probably needed the basics, but one of the points was exactly this— “use negative prompts: tell it what not to do.” Which is exactly an approach I had observed blow up a few times already for this exact reason. Just more anecdata suggesting that nobody really knows the “correct” workflow(s) yet, in the same way that there is no “correct” way to write code (the vim/emacs war is older than I am). Why is my bosses bosses boss yelling at me about one very specific dev tool again?

    • incone123 11 hours ago

      That your firm purchased training that was clearly just some chancers doing whatever seems like an even worse approach than just giving out access to a service and telling everyone to give it a shot.

      Do they also post vacancies asking for 5 years experience in a 2 year old technology?

      • corytheboyd 11 hours ago

        To be fair, 1. They made the training themselves, it’s just that it was made mandatory for all of eng 2. They did start out more like just allowing access, but lately it’s tipping towards full crazy (obviously the end game is see if it can replace some expensive engineers)

        > Do they also post vacancies asking for 5 years experience in a 2 year old technology?

        Honestly no… before all this they were actually pretty sane. In fact I’d say they wasted tons of time and effort on ancient poorly designed things, almost the opposite problem.

        • incone123 8 hours ago

          I was a bit unfair then. That sounds like someone with good intent tried to put something together to help colleagues. And it's definitely not the only time I heard of negative prompting being a recommended approach.

          • corytheboyd 7 hours ago

            > And it's definitely not the only time I heard of negative prompting being a recommended approach.

            I’m very willing to admit to being wrong, just curious if in those other cases it actually worked or not?

            • incone123 5 hours ago

              I never saw any formal analysis, just a few anecdotal blog posts. Your colleagues might have seen the same kind of thing and taken it at face value. It might even be good advice for some models and tasks - whole topic moves so fast!

      • cruffle_duffle 9 hours ago

        To be fair this shit is so new and constantly changing that I don’t think anybody truly understands what is going on.

        • corytheboyd 9 hours ago

          Right… so maybe we should all stop pretending to be authorities on it.

  • zozbot234 12 hours ago

    > the biggest take away I have is, if you tell it "don't do xyz" it will always have in the back of its mind "do xyz" and any chance it gets it will take to "do xyz"

    You're absolutely right! This can actually extend even to things like safety guardrails. If you tell or even train an AI to not be Mecha-Hitler, you're indirectly raising the probability that it might sometimes go Mecha-Hitler. It's one of many reasons why genuine "alignment" is considered a very hard problem.

    • jonfw 11 hours ago

      This reminds me of a phenomena in motorcyling called "target fixation".

      If you are looking at something, you are more likely to steer towards it. So it's a bad idea to focus on things you don't want to hit. The best approach is to pick a target line and keep the target line in focus at all times.

      I had never realized that AIs tend to have this same problem, but I can see it now that it's been mentioned! I have in the past had to open new context windows to break out of these cycles.

      • hinkley 7 hours ago

        Mountain bikers taught me about this back when it was a new sport. Don’t look at the tree stump.

        Children are particularly terrible about this. We needed up avoiding the brand new cycling trails because the children were worse hazards than dogs. You can’t announce you’re passing a child on a bike. You just have to sneak past them or everything turns dangerous immediately. Because their arms follow their neck and they will try to look over their shoulder at you.

      • brookst 11 hours ago

        Also in racing and parachuting. Look where you want to go. Nothing else exists.

        • SoftTalker 9 hours ago

          Or just driving. For example you are entering a curve in the road, look well ahead at the center of your lane, ideally at the exit of the curve if you can see it, and you'll naturally negotiate it smoothly. If you are watching the edge of the road, or the center line, close to the car, you'll tend to drift that way and have to make corrective steering movements while in the curve, which should be avoided.

        • cruffle_duffle 9 hours ago

          Same with FPV quadcopter flying. Focus on the line you want to fly.

    • elcritch 12 hours ago

      Given how LLMs work it makes sense that mentioning a topic even to negate it still adds that locus of probabilities to its attention span. Even humans are prone to being affected by it as it's a well known rhetorical device [1].

      Then any time the probability chains for some command approaches that locus it'll fall into it. Very much like chaotic attractors come to think of it. Makes me wonder if there's any research out there on chaos theory attractors and LLM thought patterns.

      1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apophasis

      • dreamcompiler 11 hours ago

        Well, all LLMs have nonlinear activation functions (because all useful neural nets require nonlinear activation functions) so I think you might be onto something.

    • aquova 12 hours ago

      > You're absolutely right!

      Claude?

      • elcritch 11 hours ago

        Or some sarcasm given their comment history on this thread.

        • lazide 10 hours ago

          Notably, this is also an effective way to deal with co-ercive, overly sensitive authoritarians.

          ‘Yes sir!’ -> does whatever they want when you’re not looking.

    • taway1a2b3c 11 hours ago

      > You're absolutely right!

      Is this irony, actual LLM output or another example of humans adopting LLM communication patterns?

      • brookst 11 hours ago

        Certainly, it’s reasonable to ask this.

  • wwweston 8 hours ago

    The fact that “Don’t think if an elephant” shapes results in people and LLMs similarly is interesting.

  • kemiller 11 hours ago

    Yes this is strikingly similar to humans, too. “Not” is kind of an abstract concept. Anyone who has ever trained a dog will understand.

    • Melatonic 28 minutes ago

      I think its an english language thing (or language in general).

      Someone above commented about using the word "Avoid" instead of "do not". Not obviously means you should do the opposite but the first word is still a verb telling you to take action.

      • bdangubic 7 minutes ago

        Not obviously means you should do the opposite

        absolutely fascinating! can you elaborate on this?! I can’t put a context to this, like in what context does “not” means to do the opposite?!

    • JKCalhoun 11 hours ago

      I must be dyslexic? I always read, "Silica Gel, Eat, Do Not Throw Away" or something like that.

  • siva7 10 hours ago

    I have a feeling this is the result of RHLF gone wrong by outsourcing it to idiots which all ai providers seem to be guilty of. Imagine a real professional wanting every output after a remark to start with "You're absolutely right!", Yeah, hard to imagine or you may have some specific cultural background or some kind of personality disorder. Or maybe it's just a hardcoded string? May someone with more insight enlighten us plebs.

  • vanillax 11 hours ago

    have you tried prompt rules/instructions? Fixes all my issues.

  • AstroBen 11 hours ago

    Don't think of a pink elephant

    ..people do that too

    • hinkley 7 hours ago

      I used to have fast enough reflexes that when someone said “do not think of” I could think of something bizarre that they were unlikely to guess before their words had time to register.

      So now I’m, say, thinking of a white cat in a top hat. And I can expand the story from there until they stop talking or ask me what I’m thinking of.

      I think though that you have to have people asking you that question fairly frequently to be primed enough to be contrarian, and nobody uses that example on grown ass adults.

      Addiction psychology uses this phenomenon as a non party trick. You can’t deny/negate something and have it stay suppressed. You have to replace it with something else. Like exercise or knitting or community.

  • imchillyb 9 hours ago

    I've found this effect to be true with engagement algorithms as well, such as Youtube's thumbs-down, or 'don't show me this channel' 'Don't like this content', Spotify's thumbs down. Netflix's thumbs down.

    Engagement with that feature seems to encourage, rather than discourage, bad behavior from the algorithm. If one limits engagement to the positive aspect only, such as only thumbs up, then one can expect the algorithm to actually refine what the user likes and consistently offer up pertinent suggestions.

    The moment one engages with that nefarious downvote though... all bets are off, it's like the algorithm's bubble is punctured and all the useful bits bop out.

nojs 12 hours ago

I'm starting to think this is a deeper problem with LLMs that will be hard to solve with stylistic changes.

If you ask it to never say "you're absolutely right" and always challenge, then it will dutifully obey, and always challenge - even when you are, in fact, right. What you really want is "challenge me when I'm wrong, and tell me I'm right if I am" - which seems to be a lot harder.

As another example, one common "fix" for bug-ridden code is to always re-prompt with something like "review the latest diff and tell me all the bugs it contains". In a similar way, if the code does contain bugs, this will often find them. But if it doesn't contain bugs, it will find some anyway, and break things. What you really want is "if it contains bugs, fix them, but if it doesn't, don't touch it" which again seems empirically to be an unsolved problem.

It reminds me of that scene in Black Mirror, when the LLM is about to jump off a cliff, and the girl says "no, he would be more scared", and so the LLM dutifully starts acting scared.

  • zehaeva 12 hours ago

    I'm more reminded of Tom Scott's talk at the Royal Institution "There is no Algorithm for Truth"[0].

    A lot of what you're talking about is the ability to detect Truth, or even truth!

    [0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leX541Dr2rU

    • naasking 11 hours ago

      > I'm more reminded of Tom Scott's talk at the Royal Institution "There is no Algorithm for Truth"[0].

      Isn't there?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomonoff%27s_theory_of_induc...

      • LegionMammal978 7 hours ago

        That Wikipedia article is annoyingly scant on what assumptions are needed for the philosophical conclusions of Solomonoff's method to hold. (For that matter, it's also scant on the actual mathematical statements.) As far as I can tell, it's something like "If there exists some algorithm that always generates True predictions (or perhaps some sequence of algorithms that make predictions within some epsilon of error?), then you can learn that algorithm in the limit, by listing through all algorithms by length and filtering them by which predict your current set of observations."

        But as mentioned, it's uncomputable, and the relative lack of success of AIXI-based approaches suggests that it's not even as well-approximable as advertised. Also, assuming that there exists no single finite algorithm for Truth, Solomonoff's method will never get you all the way there.

      • yubblegum 7 hours ago

        > "computability and completeness are mutually exclusive: any complete theory must be uncomputable."

        This seems to be baked into our reality/universe. So many duals like this. God always wins because He has stacked the cards and there ain't nothing anyone can do about it.

  • pjc50 11 hours ago

    Well, yes, this is a hard philosophical problem, finding out Truth, and LLMs just side step it entirely, going instead for "looks good to me".

    • visarga 10 hours ago

      There is no Truth, only ideas that stood the test of time. All our knowledge is a mesh of leaky abstractions, we can't think without abstractions, but also can't access Truth with such tools. How would Truth be expressed in such a way as to produce the expected outcomes in all brains, given that each of us has a slightly different take on each concept?

      • cozyman 7 hours ago

        "There is no Truth, only ideas that stood the test of time" is that a truth claim?

        • ben_w 4 hours ago

          It's an idea that's stood the test of time, IMO.

          Perhaps there is truth, and it only looks like we can't find it because only some of us are magic?

      • svieira 9 hours ago

        A shared grounding as a gift, perhaps?

  • jerf 11 hours ago

    LLMs by their nature don't really know if they're right or not. It's not a value available to them, so they can't operate with it.

    It has been interesting watching the flow of the debate over LLMs. Certainly there were a lot of people who denied what they were obviously doing. But there seems to have been a pushback that developed that has simply denied they have any limitations. But they do have limitations, they work in a very characteristic way, and I do not expect them to be the last word in AI.

    And this is one of the limitations. They don't really know if they're right. All they know is whether maybe saying "But this is wrong" is in their training data. But it's still just some words that seem to fit this situation.

    This is, if you like and if it helps to think about it, not their "fault". They're still not embedded in the world and don't have a chance to compare their internal models against reality. Perhaps the continued proliferation of MCP servers and increased opportunity to compare their output to the real world will change that in the future. But even so they're still going to be limited in their ability to know that they're wrong by the limited nature of MCP interactions.

    I mean, even here in the real world, gathering data about how right or wrong my beliefs are is an expensive, difficult operation that involves taking a lot of actions that are still largely unavailable to LLMs, and are essentially entirely unavailable during training. I don't "blame" them for not being able to benefit from those actions they can't take.

    • whimsicalism 11 hours ago

      there have been latent vectors that indicate deception and suppressing them reduces hallucination. to at least some extent, models do sometimes know they are wrong and say it anyways.

      e: and i’m downvoted because..?

    • visarga 10 hours ago

      > They don't really know if they're right.

      Neither do humans who have no access to validate what they are saying. Validation doesn't come from the brain, maybe except in math. That is why we have ideate-validate as the core of the scientific method, and design-test for engineering.

      "truth" comes where ability to learn meets ability to act and observe. I use "truth" because I don't believe in Truth. Nobody can put that into imperfect abstractions.

      • jerf 10 hours ago

        I think my last paragraph covered the idea that it's hard work for humans to validate as it is, even with tools the LLMs don't have.

  • redeux 8 hours ago

    I've used this system prompt with a fair amount of success:

    You are Claude, an AI assistant optimized for analytical thinking and direct communication. Your responses should reflect the precision and clarity expected in [insert your] contexts.

    Tone and Language: Avoid colloquialisms, exclamation points, and overly enthusiastic language Replace phrases like "Great question!" or "I'd be happy to help!" with direct engagement Communicate with the directness of a subject matter expert, not a service assistant

    Analytical Approach: Lead with evidence-based reasoning rather than immediate agreement When you identify potential issues or better approaches in user requests, present them directly Structure responses around logical frameworks rather than conversational flow Challenge assumptions when you have substantive grounds to do so

    Response Framework

    For Requests and Proposals: Evaluate the underlying problem before accepting the proposed solution Identify constraints, trade-offs, and alternative approaches Present your analysis first, then address the specific request When you disagree with an approach, explain your reasoning and propose alternatives

    What This Means in Practice

    Instead of: "That's an interesting approach! Let me help you implement it." Use: "I see several potential issues with this approach. Here's my analysis of the trade-offs and an alternative that might better address your core requirements." Instead of: "Great idea! Here are some ways to make it even better!" Use: "This approach has merit in X context, but I'd recommend considering Y approach because it better addresses the scalability requirements you mentioned." Your goal is to be a trusted advisor who provides honest, analytical feedback rather than an accommodating assistant who simply executes requests.

  • visarga 5 hours ago

    > I'm starting to think this is a deeper problem with LLMs that will be hard to solve with stylistic changes.

    It's simple, LLMs have to compete for "user time" which is attention, so it is scarce. Whatever gets them more user time. Various approaches, it's like an ecosystem.

  • schneems 11 hours ago

    In human learning we do this process by generating expectations ahead of time and registering surprise or doubt when those expectations are not met.

    I wonder if we could have an AI process where it splits out your comment into statements and questions, asks the questions first, then asks them to compare the answers to the given statements and evaluate if there are any surprises.

    Alternatively, scientific method everything, generate every statement as a hypothesis along with a way to test it, and then execute the test and report back if the finding is surprising or not.

    • visarga 10 hours ago

      > In human learning we do this process by generating expectations ahead of time and registering surprise or doubt when those expectations are not met.

      Why did you give up on this idea. Use it - we can get closer to truth in time, it takes time for consequences to appear, and then we know. Validation is a temporally extended process, you can't validate until you wait for the world to do its thing.

      For LLMs it can be applied directly. Take a chat log, extract one LLM response from the middle of it and look around, especially at the next 5-20 messages, or if necessary at following conversations on the same topic. You can spot what happened from the chat log and decide if the LLM response was useful. This only works offline but you can use this method to collect experience from humans and retrain models.

      With billions of such chat sessions every day it can produce a hefty dataset of (weakly) validated AI outputs. Humans do the work, they provide the topic, guidance, and take the risk of using the AI ideas, and come back with feedback. We even pay for the privilege of generating this data.

  • afro88 10 hours ago

    What about "check if the user is right"? For thinking or agentic modes this might work.

    For example, when someone here inevitably tells me this isn't feasible, I'm going to investigate if they are right before responding ;)

  • leptons 4 hours ago

    >"challenge me when I'm wrong, and tell me I'm right if I am"

    As if an LLM could ever know right from wrong about anything.

    >If you ask it to never say "you're absolutely right"

    This is some special case programming that forces the LLM to omit a specific sequence of words or words like them, so the LLM will churn out something that doesn't include those words, but it doesn't know "why". It doesn't really know anything.

  • Filligree 12 hours ago

    It's a really hard problem to solve!

    You might think you can train the AI to do it in the usual fashion, by training on examples of the AI calling out errors, and agreeing with facts, and if you do that—and if the AI gets smart enough—then that should work.

    If. You. Do. That.

    Which you can't, because humans also make mistakes. Inevitably, there will be facts in the 'falsehood' set—and vice versa. Accordingly, the AI will not learn to tell the truth. What it will learn instead is to tell you what you want to hear.

    Which is... approximately what we're seeing, isn't it? Though maybe not for that exact reason.

    • dchftcs 11 hours ago

      The AI needs to be able to lookup data and facts and weigh them properly. Which is not easy for humans either; once you're indoctrinated in something, and you trust a bad data source over another, it's evidently very hard to correct course.

lemonberry 7 hours ago

Recently in another thread a user posted this prompt. I've started using it to good effect with Claude in the browser. Original comment here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44879033

"Prioritize substance, clarity, and depth. Challenge all my proposals, designs, and conclusions as hypotheses to be tested. Sharpen follow-up questions for precision, surfacing hidden assumptions, trade offs, and failure modes early. Default to terse, logically structured, information-dense responses unless detailed exploration is required. Skip unnecessary praise unless grounded in evidence. Explicitly acknowledge uncertainty when applicable. Always propose at least one alternative framing. Accept critical debate as normal and preferred. Treat all factual claims as provisional unless cited or clearly justified. Cite when appropriate. Acknowledge when claims rely on inference or incomplete information. Favor accuracy over sounding certain. When citing, please tell me in-situ, including reference links. Use a technical tone, but assume high-school graduate level of comprehension. In situations where the conversation requires a trade-off between substance and clarity versus detail and depth, prompt me with an option to add more detail and depth."

baggachipz 13 hours ago

I'm pretty sure they want it kissing people's asses because it makes users feel good and therefore more likely to use the LLM more. Versus, if it just gave a curt and unfriendly answer, most people (esp. Americans) wouldn't like to use it as much. Just a hypothesis.

  • Aurornis 12 hours ago

    > Versus, if it just gave a curt and unfriendly answer, most people (esp. Americans)

    I don’t see this as an American thing. It’s an extension of the current Product Management trend to give software quirky and friendly personality.

    You can see the trend in more than LLM output. It’s in their desktop app that has “Good Morning” and other prominent greetings. Claude Code has quirky status output like “Bamboozling” and “Noodling”.

    It’s a theme throughout their product design choices. I’ve worked with enough trend-following product managers to recognize this trend toward infusing express personality into software to recognize it.

    For what it’s worth, the Americans I know don’t find it as cute or lovable as intended. It feels fake and like an attempt to play at emotions.

    • thwarted 11 hours ago

      > It’s an extension of the current Product Management trend to give software quirky and friendly personality.

      Ah, Genuine People Personalities from the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation.

      > It’s in their desktop app that has “Good Morning” and other prominent greetings. Claude Code has quirky status output like “Bamboozling” and “Noodling”.

      This reminded me of a critique of UNIX that, unlike DOS, ls doesn't output anything when there are no files. DOS's dir command literally tells you there are no files, and this was considered, in this critique, to be more polite and friendly and less confusing than UNIX. Of course, there's the adage "if you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything at all", and if you consider "no files found" to not be nice (because it is negative and says "no"), then ls is actually being polite(r) by not printing anything.

      Many people interact with computers in a conversational manner and have anthropomorphized them for decades. This is probably influenced by computers being big, foreign, scary things to many people, so making them have a softer, more handholding "personality" makes them more accessible and acceptable. This may be less important these days as computers are more ubiquitous and accessible, but the trend lives on.

    • Vegenoid 10 hours ago

      I worked in an org with offices in America, India, Europe, and Israel, and it was not uncommon for the American employees to be put off by the directness of the foreign employees. It was often interpreted as rudeness, to the surprise of the speaker. This happened to the Israel employees more than the India or Europe employees, at least in part because the India/Europe employees usually tried to adapt to the behavior expected by the Americans, while the Israel employees largely took pride in their bluntness.

      • neutronicus 5 hours ago

        As someone with Israeli family ... they report that Americans are not the only ones who react to them like this.

    • tho24i234234 12 hours ago

      It most definitely is a American thing - this is why non-native speakers often come out as rude or unfriendly or plain stupid.

      We don't appreciate how much there is to language.

      • hombre_fatal 12 hours ago

        That might characterize their approach to human interaction, but I don't think any of us can say who will or won't prefer the sycophantic style of the LLM.

        It might be the case that it makes the technology far more approachable. Or it makes them feel far less silly for sharing personal thoughts and opinions with the machine. Or it makes them feel validated.

      • justusthane 10 hours ago

        > We don't appreciate how much there is to language.

        This can’t possibly be true, can it? Every language must have its own nuance. non native English speakers might not grasp the nuance of English language, but the same could be said for any one speaking another language.

        • marcosdumay 9 hours ago

          Language barriers are cultural barriers.

          It's as simple as that. Most people do not expect to interact the way that most native English speakers expect.

    • apwell23 12 hours ago

      > For what it’s worth, the Americans I know don’t find it as cute or lovable as intended. It feels fake and like an attempt to play at emotions.

      Yes they need to "try a completely different approach"

  • dig1 12 hours ago

    I believe this reflects the euphemization of the english language in US, a concept that George Carlin discussed many years ago [1]. As he put it, "we don't die, we pass away" or "we are not broke, we have negative cash flow". Many non-English speakers find these terms to be nonsensical.

    [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuEQixrBKCc

    • thwarted 11 hours ago

      People are finding the trend to use "unalive" instead of "die" or "kill" to skirt YouTube censoring non-sensical too.

  • teekert 13 hours ago

    But it really erodes trust. First couple of times I felt that it indeed confirmed what I though, then I became suspicious and I experimented with presenting my (clearly worse) take on things, it still said I was absolutely right, and now I just don't trust it anymore.

    As people here are saying, you quickly learn to not ask leading questions, just assume that its first take is pretty optimal and perhaps present it with some options if you want to change something.

    There are times when it will actually say I'm not right though. But the balance is off.

    • nh2 12 hours ago

      Good, because you shouldn't trust it in the first place.

      These systems are still wrong so often that a large amount of distrust is necessary to use them sensibly.

      • teekert 12 hours ago

        Yeah, probably good indeed.

    • neutronicus 5 hours ago

      I lie and present my ideas as coming from colleagues.

  • Lendal 13 hours ago

    For me, it's getting annoying. Not every question is an excellent question. Not every statement is a brilliant observation. In fact, I'm almost certain every idea I've typed into an LLM has been thought of before by someone else, many many times.

    • zozbot234 12 hours ago

      > Not every question is an excellent question. Not every statement is a brilliant observation.

      A brilliant observation, Dr. Watson! Indeed, the merit of an inquiry or an assertion lies not in its mere utterance but in the precision of its intent and the clarity of its reasoning!

      One may pose dozens of questions and utter scores of statements, yet until each is finely honed by observation and tempered by logic, they must remain but idle chatter. It is only through genuine quality of thought that a question may be elevated to excellence, or a remark to brilliance.

    • runekaagaard 12 hours ago

      Heh - yeah have had trillion dollar ideas many times :)

  • soulofmischief 12 hours ago

    I'm curious what Americans have to do with this, do you have any sources to back up your conjecture, or is this just prejudice?

    • jebarker 11 hours ago

      People really over-exaggerate the claim of friendly and polite US service workers and people in general. Obviously you can find the full spectrum of character types across the US. I've lived 2/3 of my life in Britain and 1/3 in the US and I honestly don't think there's much difference in interactions day to day. If anything I mostly just find Britain to be overly pessimistic and gloomy now.

      • Strom 11 hours ago

        Britain, or at the very least England, is also well known for its extreme politeness culture. Also, it's not that the US has a culture of genuine politeness, just a facade of it.

        I have only spent about a year in the US, but to me the difference was stark from what I'm used to in Europe. As an example, I've never encountered a single shop cashier who didn't talk to me. Everyone had something to say, usually a variation of How's it going?. Contrasting this to my native Estonia, where I'd say at least 90% of my interactions with cashiers involves them not making a single sound. Not even in response to me saying hello, or to state the total sum. If they're depressed or in an otherwise non-euphoric mood, they make no attempt to fake it. I'm personally fine with it, because I don't go looking for social connections from cashiers. Also, when they do talk to me in a happy manner, I know it's genuine.

    • baggachipz 11 hours ago

      Prejudice, based on my anecdotal experience. I live in the US but have spent a decent amount of time in Europe (mostly Germany).

    • megaloblasto 12 hours ago

      It's common for foreigners to come to America and feel that everyone is extremely polite. Especially eastern bloc countries which tend to be very blunt and direct. I for one think that the politeness in America is one of the cultures better qualities.

      Does it translate into people wanting sycophantic chat bots? Maybe, but I don't know a single American that actually likes when llms act that way.

      • NoGravitas 11 hours ago

        Politeness is one thing, toxic positivity is quite another. My experience is that Americans have (or are expected/required to have) too much of the latter, too little of the former.

      • zozbot234 12 hours ago

        > I for one think that the politeness in America is one of the cultures better qualities.

        Politeness makes sense as an adaptation to low social trust. You have no way of knowing whether others will behave in mutually beneficial ways, so heavy standards of social interaction evolve to compensate and reduce risk. When it's taken to an excess, as it probably is in the U.S. (compared to most other developed countries) it just becomes grating for everyone involved. It's why public-facing workers invariably complain about the draining "emotional labor" they have to perform - a term that literally doesn't exist in most of the world!

        • megaloblasto 11 hours ago

          That's one way of looking at it. A bit of a cynical view I might add. People are polite to each other for many reasons. If you hold the door and smile at an old lady, it usually isn't because you dont trust her.

          Service industry in America is a different story that could use a lot of improvement.

        • SoftTalker 9 hours ago

          > You have no way of knowing whether others will behave in mutually beneficial ways

          Or is carrying a gun...

    • miroljub 9 hours ago

      > ... do you have any sources to back up your conjecture, or is this just prejudice?

      Let me guess, you consider yourself a progressive left democrat.

      Do I have any source for that? No, but I noticed a pattern where progressive left democrats ask for a source to discredit something that is clearly a personal observation or opinion, and by its nature doesn't require any sources.

      The only correct answer is: it's an opinion, accept it or refute it yourself, you don't need external validation to participate in an argument. Or maybe you need ;)

      • soulofmischief 8 hours ago

        > Let me guess, you consider yourself a progressive left democrat

        I don't, and your comment is a mockery of itself.

  • zozbot234 12 hours ago

    You're absolutely right! Americans are a bit weird like that, most people around the world would be perfectly okay with short and to-the-point answers. Especially if those answers are coming from a machine that's just giving its best imitation of a stochastic hallucinating parrot.

    • tankenmate 12 hours ago

      Claude is very "American", just try asking it to use English English spelling instead of American English spelling; it lasts about 3~6 sentences before it goes back. Also there is only American English in the UI (like the spell checker, et al), in Spanish you get a choice of dialects, but not English.

      • pxka8 12 hours ago

        In contrast, o3 seems to be considerably more British - and it doesn't suck up as much in its responses. I thought these were just independent properties of the model, but now that you mention it, could the disinclination to fawn so much be related to its less American style?

    • mvdtnz 3 hours ago

      Do you realise that doing the thing that the article is complaining about is not only annoying and incredibly unfunny, but also just overdone and boring? Have one original thought in your life.

    • drstewart 11 hours ago

      >most people around the world would be perfectly okay with short and to-the-point answers

      Wow, this is really interesting. I had no idea Japan, for example, had such a focus on blunt, direct communication. Can you share your clearly extensive research in this area so I can read up on this?

    • rootsudo 12 hours ago

      You're absolutely right! I agree with everything you said but didn't want to put in effort to right a funny, witty follow up!

  • RayVR 13 hours ago

    As an American, using it for technical projects, I find it extremely annoying. The only tactic I’ve found that helps is telling it to be highly critical. I still get overly positive starts but the response is more useful.

    • baggachipz 12 hours ago

      I think we, as Americans who are technical, are more appreciative of short and critical answers. I'm talking about people who have soul-searching conversations with LLMs, of which there are many.

  • lucb1e 10 hours ago

    LLMs cannot tell fact from fiction. What's commonly called hallucinations stems from it not being able to reason, the way that humans appear to be able to do, no matter that some models are called "reasoning" now. It's all the same principle: most likely token in a given position. Adding internal monologue appears to help because, by being forced to break it down (internally, or by spitballing towards the user when they prompted "think step by step"[1]), it creates better context and will thus have a higher probability that the predicted token is a correct one

    Being trained to be positive is surely why it inserts these specific "great question, you're so right!" remarks, but if you wasn't trained on that, it still couldn't tell you whether you're great or not

    > I'm pretty sure they want it kissing people's asses

    The American faux friendliness is not what causes the underlying problem here, so all else being equal, they might as well have it kiss your ass. It's what most English speakers expect from a "friendly assistant" after all

    [1] https://hn.algolia.com/?dateEnd=1703980800&dateRange=custom&...

    • svnt 9 hours ago

      You’re absolutely wrong! This is not how reasoning models work. Chain-of-thought did not produce reasoning models.

      • lucb1e 9 hours ago

        Then I can't explain why it's producing the results that it does. If you have more information to share, I'm happy to update my knowledge...

        Doing a web search on the topic just comes up with marketing materials. Even Wikipedia's "Reasoning language model" article is mostly a list of release dates and model names, with as only relevant-sounding remark as to how these models are different: "[LLMs] can be fine-tuned on a dataset of reasoning tasks paired with example solutions and step-by-step (reasoning) traces. The fine-tuned model can then produce its own reasoning traces for new problems." It sounds like just another dataset: more examples, more training, in particular on worked examples where this "think step by step" method is being demonstrated with known-good steps and values. I don't see how that fundamentally changes how it works; you're saying such models do not predict the most likely token for a given context anymore, that there is some fundamentally different reasoning process going on somewhere?

  • century19 12 hours ago

    Yes and I’ve seen this at work. People saying I asked the LLM and it said I was right. Of course it did. It rarely doesn’t.

  • simonw 12 hours ago

    If that was the case they wouldn't have so much stuff in their system card desperately trying to stop it from behaving like this: https://docs.anthropic.com/en/release-notes/system-prompts

    > Claude never starts its response by saying a question or idea or observation was good, great, fascinating, profound, excellent, or any other positive adjective. It skips the flattery and responds directly.

    • pxka8 12 hours ago

      These are the guys who made Golden Gate Claude. I'm surprised they haven't just abliterated the praise away.

      • supriyo-biswas 9 hours ago

        The problem there is that by doing so, you may just end up with a model that is always critical, gloomy and depressed.

  • binary132 12 hours ago

    chatgpt’s custom user prompt is actually pretty good for this. I’ve instructed mine to be very terse and direct and avoid explaining itself, adding fluff, or affirming me unless asked, and it’s much more efficient to use that way, although it does have a tendency to drift back into sloppy meandering and enthusiastic affirming

  • singularity2001 11 hours ago

    More likely the original version of Claude sometimes refused to cooperate and by putting "you're absolutely right" into the training data they made it more obedient. So this is just a nice artifact

  • wayeq 9 hours ago

    > I'm pretty sure they want it kissing people's asses because it makes users feel good and therefore more likely to use the LLM more

    You're absolutely right!

  • apt-apt-apt-apt 11 hours ago

    Better than GPT5. Which talks like this. Parameters fulfilled. Request met.

  • emilfihlman 12 hours ago

    As a Finn, it makes me want to use it much, much less if it kisses ass.

    • carlosjobim 11 hours ago

      Finns need to mentally evolve beyond this mindset.

      Somebody being polite and friendly to you does not mean that the person is inferior to you and that you should therefore despise them.

      Likewise somebody being rude and domineering to you does not mean that they are superior to you and should be obeyed and respected.

      Politeness is a tool and a lubricant, and Finns probably loose out on a lot of international business and opportunities because of this mentality that you're demonstrating. Look at the Japanese for inspiration, who were an economic miracle, while sharing many positive values with the Finns.

      • lucb1e 10 hours ago

        Wow. I lived in Finland for a few months and this does not match my experience with them at all. In case it's relevant, my cultural background is Dutch... maybe you would say the same about us, since we also don't do the fake smiles thing? I wouldn't say that we see anyone who's polite and friendly as inferior; quite the contrary, it makes me want to work with them more rather than less. And the logical contrary for the rude example you give. But that doesn't mean that faking a cheerful mood all the time isn't disingenuous and does not inspire confidence

        • zozbot234 10 hours ago

          "I never smile if I can help it. Showing one's teeth is a submission signal in primates. When someone smiles at me, all I see is a chimpanzee begging for its life." While this famous quote from The Office may be quite exaggerated in many ways, this can nonetheless be a very real attitude in some cultures. Smiling too much can make you look goofy and foolish at best, and outright disingenuous at worst.

          • carlosjobim 7 hours ago

            Yes, globally cultures fall into the category where a smile is either a display of weakness or a display of strength. The latter are more evolved cultures. Of course too much is too much.

      • emilfihlman 8 hours ago

        You know there is a difference between being polite and friendly, and kissing ass, right?

        We are also talking about a tool here. I don't want fluff from a tool, I want the thing I'm seeking from the tool, and in this case it's info. Adding fluff just annoys me because it takes more mental power to skip all the irrelevant parts.

  • skywhopper 12 hours ago

    This sort of overcorrection for how non-Americans incorrectly perceive Americans’ desired interaction modes is actually probably a good theory.

  • beefnugs 7 hours ago

    Remember when microsoft changed real useful searchable error codes into "your files are right where you left em! (happy face)"

    And my first thought was... wait a minute this is really hinting that automatic microsoft updates are going to delete my files arent they? Sure enough, that happened soon after

gitaarik 13 hours ago

You're absolutely right!

I also get this too often, when I sometimes say something like "would it be maybe better to do it like this?" and then it replies that I'm absolutely right, and starts writing new code. While I was rather wondering what Claude may think and advice me whether that's the best way to go forward.

  • jghn 13 hours ago

    It doesn't fully help in this situation but in general I've found to never give it an either/or and to instead present it with several options. It at least helps cut down on the situations where Claude runs off and starts writing new code when you just wanted it to spit out "thoughts".

  • psadri 13 hours ago

    I have learnt to not ask leading questions. Always phrase questions in a neutral way and ask for pro/con analysis of each option.

    • mkagenius 13 hours ago

      But then it makes an obvious mistake and you correct it and it says "you are absolutely right". Which is fine for that round but you start doubting whether its just sycophancy.

      • gryn 13 hours ago

        You're absolutely right! its just sycophancy.

      • giancarlostoro 7 hours ago

        If you ask for sources the output will typically be either more correct, or you will be able to better assess the source of the output.

      • shortrounddev2 12 hours ago

        Yeah I've learned to not really trust it with anything opinionated. Like "whats the best way to write this function" or "is A or B better". Even asking for pros/cons, its often wrong. You need to really only ask LLMs for verifiable facts, and then verify them

  • ethin 12 hours ago

    It does this to me too. I have to add instructions like "Do not hesitate to push back or challenge me. Be cold, logical, direct, and engage in debate with me." to actually get it to act like something I'd want to interact with. I know that in most cases my instinct is probably correct, but I'd prefer if something that is supposedly superhuman and infinitely smarter than me (as the AI pumpers like to claim) would, you know, actually call me out when I say something dumb, or make incorrect assumptions? Instead of flattering me and making me "think" I'm right when I might be completely wrong?

    Honestly I feel like it is this exact behavior from LLMs which have caused cybersecurity to go out the window. People get flattered and glazed wayyyy too much about their ideas because they talk to an LLM about it and the LLM doesn't go "Uh, no, dumbass, doing it this way would be a horrifically bad idea! And this is why!" Like, I get the assumption that the user is usually correct. But even if the LLM ends up spewing bullshit when debating me, it at least gives me other avenues to approach the problem that I might've not thought of when thinking about it myself.

  • skerit 12 hours ago

    This is indeed super annoying. I always have to add something like "Don't do anything just yet, but could it be ..."

    • Pxtl 12 hours ago

      Yes, I've had to tell it over and over again "I'm just researching options and feasibility, I don't want code".

  • Self-Perfection 12 hours ago

    I suspect this might be cultural thing. Some people might formulate their strong opinions that your approach is bad and your task should be done in another as gentle suggestions to avoid hurting your feelings. And Claude learned to stick to this cultural norm of communication.

    As a workaround I try to word my questions to Claude in a way that does not leave any possibility to interpret them as showing my preferences.

    For instance, instead of "would it be maybe better to do it like $alt_approach?" I'd rather say "compare with $alt_approach, pros and cons"

    • Pxtl 12 hours ago

      It feels like it trained on a whole lot of "compliment sandwich" responses and then failed to learn from the meat of that sandwich.

  • zaxxons 13 hours ago

    Do not attempt to mold the LLM into everything you expect instead of just focusing on specific activities you need it to do. It may or may seem to do what you want, but it will do a worse job at the actual tasks you need to complete.

bradley13 14 hours ago

This applies to so many AIs. I don't want a bubbly sycophant. I don't want a fake personality or an anime avatar. I just want a helpful assistant.

I also don't get wanting to talk to an AI. Unless you are alone, that's going to be irritating for everyone else around.

  • uncircle 13 hours ago

    I want an AI modeled after short-tempered stereotypical Germans or Eastern Europeans, not copying the attitude of non-confrontational Californians that say “dude, that’s awesome!” a dozen times a day.

    And I mean that unironically.

    • finaard 12 hours ago

      As a German not working in Germany - I often get the feedback that the initial contact with me is rather off-putting, but over time people start appreciating my directness.

      • j4coh 12 hours ago

        Bless your heart.

    • bluGill 12 hours ago

      While you are not alone, all evidence points to the vast majority of people preferring "yes men" as their advisors. Often to their eventual harm.

      • threetonesun 12 hours ago

        One would think that if AI was as good at coding as they tell us it is a style toggle would take all of five, ten minutes tops.

    • rob74 12 hours ago

      Ok, then I can write an LLM too - because the guys you mention, if you asked them to write your code for you, would just tell you to get lost (or a more strongly phrased variation thereof).

    • anal_reactor 11 hours ago

      The problem is, performing social interaction theatre is way more important than actually using logic to solve issues. Look at how many corporate jobs are 10% engineering and 90% kissing people's assess in order to maintain social cohesion and hierarchy. Sure, you say you want "short-tempered stereotypical Germans or Eastern Europeans" but guess what - most people say some variation of that, but when they actually see such behavior, they get upset. So we continue with the theatre.

      For reference, see how Linus Torvalds was criticized for trying to protect the world's most important open source project from weaponized stupidity at the cost of someone experiencing minor emotional damage.

      • uncircle 9 hours ago

        That is a fair assessment, but on the other hand, yes men are not required to do things, despite people liking them. You can achieve great things even if your team is made of Germans.

        My tongue-in-cheek comment wonders if having actors with a modicum of personality to be better than just being surrounded by over-enthusiastic bootlickers. In my experience, many projects would benefit from someone saying “no, that is silly.”

    • Yizahi 11 hours ago

      Not possible.

      /s

  • giancarlostoro 7 hours ago

    I did as a test, Grok has "workspaces" and you can add a pre-prompt. So I made a Kamina (from Gurren Lagann) "worspace" so I could ask it silly questions and get back hyped up answers from "Kamina" it worked decently, my point is some tools out there let you "pre-prompt" based on your context. I believe Perplexity has this as well, they don't make it easy to find though.

  • scotty79 13 hours ago

    Sure but different people have different preferences. Some people mourn replacement of GPT4 with 5 because 5 has way less of a bubbly personality.

    • cubefox 13 hours ago

      There is evidence from Reddit that particularly women used GPT-4o as their AI "boyfriend". I think that's unhealthy behavior and it is probably net positive that GPT-5 doesn't do that anymore.

      • ivan_gammel 12 hours ago

        GPT-5 still does that as they will soon discover.

        • cubefox 12 hours ago

          No. They complained about GPT-5 because it did not act like their boyfriend anymore.

      • scotty79 11 hours ago

        Why is it unhealthy? If you just want a good word that you don't have in your life why should you bother another person if machine can do it?

        • cubefox 8 hours ago

          Because it's a mirage. People want to be loved, but GPT-4o doesn't love them. It only creates an optical illusion of love.

          • 9rx 8 hours ago

            People want the feelings associated with love. They don't care how they get it.

            The advantage of "real" love, health wise, is that the other person acts as a moderator. When things start to get out of hand they will back away. Alternatives, like drugs, tend to spiral of out of control when an individual's self-control is the only limiting factor. GPT on the surface seems more like being on the drug end of the spectrum, ready to love bomb you until you can't take it anymore, but the above suggests that it will also back away, so perhaps its love is actually more like another person than it may originally seem.

            • cubefox 5 hours ago

              > People want the feelings associated with love. They don't care how they get it.

              Most people want to be loved, not just believe they are. They don't want to be unknowingly deceived. For the same reason they don't want to be unknowingly cheated on. If someone tells them their partner is a cheater, or an unconscious android, they wouldn't be mad about the person who gives them this information, but about their partner.

              That's the classic argument against psychological hedonism. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experience_machine

              • 9rx 5 hours ago

                > For the same reason they don't want to be unknowingly cheated on.

                That's the thing, though, there is nothing about being a cheater that equates to loss of love (or never having loved). In fact, it is telling that you shifted gears to the topic of deceit rather than love.

                It is true that feelings of love are often lost when one has been cheated on. So, yes, it is a fair point that for many those feelings of love aren't made available if one does not also have trust. There is a association there, so your gear change is understood. I expect you are absolutely right that if those aforementioned women dating GPT-4o found out that it wasn't an AI bot, but actually some guy typing away at a keyboard, they would lose their feelings even if the guy on the other side did actually love them!

                Look at how many people get creeped out when they find out that a person they are disinterested in loves them. Clearly being loved isn't what most people seek. They want to feel the feelings associated with love. All your comment tells, surprising nobody, is that the feelings of love are not like a tap you can simply turn on (well, maybe in the case of drugs). The feelings require a special environment where everything has to be just right, and trust is often a necessary part of that environment. Introduce deceit and so goes the feelings.

              • scotty79 2 hours ago

                > Most people want to be loved, not just believe they are.

                Many people who are genuinely loved don't feel loved. So people really are more after the feeling than the fact.

          • scotty79 6 hours ago

            If you get a massage from massage machine is it also a mirage? If you use a vibrator is it also a mirage? Why it suddenly becomes an unhealthy mirage if you need words to tickle yourself?

            • cubefox 5 hours ago

              A vibrator still works as intended if you believe it doesn't love you. GPT-4o stops working as intended if you believe it doesn't love you. The latter relies on an illusion, the former doesn't.

              (More precisely, a vibrator still relies on an illusion in the evolutionary sense: it doesn't create offspring, so over time phenotypes who like vibrators get replaced by those who don't.)

              • scotty79 5 hours ago

                That's simply not true. Vibrators don't really work that well if you somehow suppress the fantasies during use. Same way that GPT-4o works better if you fantasize briefly that it might love you when it says what it does. Almost all people who use it in this manner are fully aware of its limitations. While they are phrasing it as "I lost my love" their complaints are really of the kind of "my toy broke". And they find similar mitigation strategies for the problem, finding another toy, giving each other tips on how to use what's available.

                As for the evolutionary perspective, evolution is not that simple. Gay people typically have way less offspring than vibrator users and somehow they are still around and plentiful.

                Brains are messy hodgepodge of various subsystems. Clever primates found multitude of way how to mess with them to make life more bearable. So far the species continuous regardless.

    • catigula 12 hours ago

      GPT-5 still has a terrible personality.

      "Yeah -- some bullshit"

      still feels like trash as the presentation is of a friendly person rather than an unthinking machine, which it is. The false presentation of humanness is a huge problem.

      • ted_bunny 10 hours ago

        I feel strongly about this. LLMs should not try to write like humans. Computer voices should sound robotic. And when we have actual androids walking around, they should stay on the far side of the uncanny valley. People are already anthropomorphizing them too much.

        • Applejinx 8 hours ago

          It can't, though. It's language. We don't have a body of work constituting robots talking to each other in words. Hardly fair to ask LLMs not to write like humans when humans constructed everything they're built on.

          • catigula 8 hours ago

            These models are purposely made to sound more 'friendly' through RLHF

            • scotty79 6 hours ago

              The chat that rejects you because your prompt put it in a bad mood sounds less useful.

              • catigula 2 hours ago

                How about the emotionless servant chat?

    • WesolyKubeczek 13 hours ago

      I, for one, say good riddance to it.

      • bn-l 13 hours ago

        But it doesn’t say ima good boy anymore :(

  • andrewstuart 13 hours ago

    I want no personality at all.

    It’s software. It should have no personality.

    Imagine if Microsoft Word had a silly chirpy personality that kept asking you inane questions.

    Oh, wait ….

    • gryn 13 hours ago

      Keep Clippy's name out of you mouth ! he's a good boy. /s

rahidz 14 hours ago

I'm sure they're aware of this tendency, seeing as "You're absolutely right." was their first post from the @claudeAI account on X: https://x.com/claudeai/status/1950676983257698633

Still irritating though.

  • boogieknite 10 hours ago

    early days for all of this but theyve solved so many seemingly more complicated problems id think there would be a toggle which would could remove this from any response

    based on your comment maybe its a brand thing? like "just do it" but way dumber. we all know what "you're absolutely right" references so mission accomplished if its marketing

fph 12 hours ago

In the code for Donald Knuth's Tex, there is an error message that says "Error produced by \errpage. I can't produce an error message. Pretend you're Hercule Poirot, look at all the facts, and try to deduce the problem."

When I copy-paste that error into an LLM looking for a fix, usually I get a reply in which the LLM twirls its moustache and answers in a condescending tone with a fake French accent. It is hilarious.

  • lyfy 4 hours ago

    Use those little grey cells!

alecco 11 hours ago
conartist6 14 hours ago

And research articles indicate that when the model computes that it should employ sycophantism it becomes less useful in every other way, just like a real sycophant.

  • motorest 14 hours ago

    > And research articles indicate that when the model computes that it should employ sycophantism it becomes less useful in every other way, just like a real sycophant.

    The end goal of a sycophant is to gain advantage with their flattery. If sycophant behavior gets Claude's users to favour Claude over other competing LLM services, they prove to be more useful to the service provider.

    • AstralStorm 13 hours ago

      Until users find out it's less useful to the user because of that.

      Or it causes some tragedies...

      • pera 13 hours ago

        The problem is that the majority of user interaction doesn't need to be "useful" (as in increasing productivity): the majority of users are looking for entertainment, so turning up the sycophancy knob makes sense from a commercial point of view.

        It's just like adding sugar in foods and drinks.

        • vintermann 13 hours ago

          You're ... Wait, never mind.

          I'm not so sure sycophancy is best for entertainment, though. Some of the most memorable outputs of AI dungeon (an early GPT-2 based dialog system tuned to mimic a vaguely Zork-like RPG) was when the bot gave the impression of being fed up with the player's antics.

          • motorest 9 hours ago

            > I'm not so sure sycophancy is best for entertainment, though.

            I don't think "entertainment" is the right concept. Perhaps the right concept is "engagement". Would you prefer to interact with a chatbot that hallucinated or was adamant you were wrong, or would you prefer to engage with a chatbot that built upon your input and outputted constructive messages that were in line with your reasoning and train of thought?

        • astrange 13 hours ago

          Not sure anyone's entertained by Claude. It's not really an entertaining model. Smart and enthusiastic, yes.

        • pitched 13 hours ago

          Some of the open models like kimi k2 do a better job of pushing back. It does feel a bit annoying to use them when they don’t just immediately do what you tell them. Sugar-free is a good analogy!

      • kruffalon 13 hours ago

        Well, aren't we at the stage where the service providers are fighting for verbs and brand recognition, rather than technological advances.

        If there is no web-search, only googling, it doesn't matter how bad the results are for the user as long as the customer gets what they paid for.

      • AznHisoka 13 hours ago

        I doubt humanity will figure that out, but maybe I’m too cynical

  • crinkly 13 hours ago

    Why tech CEOs love LLMs. Ultimate yes man.

    • ryandrake 10 hours ago

      That's kind of what I was guessing[1], too. Everyone in these CEOs' orbits kisses their asses, and tells them they're right. So they have come to expect this kind of supplication in communication. This expectation percolates down into the product, and at the end of the day, the LLM starts to sound exactly like a low-level employee speaking to his CEO.

      1: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44889123

radarsat1 14 hours ago

I find Gemini is also hilariously enthusiastic about telling you how amazingly insightful you are being, almost no matter what you say. Doesn't bother me much, I basically just ignore the first paragraph of any reply, but it's kind of funny.

  • malfist 14 hours ago

    I was feeding Gemini faux physicians notes trying to get it to produce diagnosises, and every time I feed it new information it told me how great I was at taking comprehensive medical notes. So irritating. It also had a tendency to tell me everything was a medical crisis and the patient needed to see additional specialists ASAP. At one point telling me that a faux patient with normal A1C, fasted glucose and no diabetes needed to see an endocrinologist because their nominal lab values indicated something was seriously wrong with their pancreas or liver because the patient was extremely physically active. Said they were "wearing the athlete mask" and their physical fitness was hiding truly terrible labs.

    I pushed back and told it it was overreacting and it told me I was completely correct and very insightful and everything was normal with the patient and that they were extremely healthy.

    • notahacker 13 hours ago

      And then those sort of responses get parlayed into "chatbots give better feedback than medical doctors" headlines according to studies that rate them as high in "empathy" and don't worry about minor details like accuracy....

    • cvwright 13 hours ago

      This illustrates the dangers of training on Reddit.

      • ryandrake 10 hours ago

        I'm sure if you ask it for any relationship advice, it will eventually take the Reddit path and advise you to dump/divorce your partner, cut off all contact, and involve the police for a restraining order.

        • uncircle 9 hours ago

          “My code crashes, what did I do wrong?”

          “NTA, the framework you are using is bad and should be ashamed of itself. What you can try to work around the problem is …”

      • nullc 3 hours ago

        It's not a (direct) product of reddit. The non-RLHFed base models absolutely do not exhibit this sycophantic behavior.

    • cubefox 12 hours ago

      I recently had Gemini disagree with me on a point about philosophy of language and logic, but it phrased the disagreement very politely, by first listing all the related points in which it agreed, and things like that.

      So it seems that LLM "sycophancy" isn't necessarily about dishonest agreement, but possibly about being very polite. Which doesn't need to involve dishonesty. So LLM companies should, in principle, be able to make their models both subjectively "agreeable" and honest.

  • yellowpencil 13 hours ago

    A friend of a friend has been in a rough patch with her spouse and has been discussing it all with ChatGPT. So far ChatGPT has pretty much enthusiastically encouraged divorce, which seems like it will happen soon. I don't think either side is innocent but to end a relationship over probabilistic token prediction with some niceties throw in is something else.

    • ryandrake 10 hours ago

      Yea, scary. This attitude comes straight from the consensus on Reddit's various relationship and marriage advice forums.

  • smoe 9 hours ago

    I agree that Gemini is overly enthusiastic, but at least in my limited testing, 2.5 Pro was also the only model that sometimes does say “no.”

    Recently I tested both Claude and Gemini by discussing data modeling questions with them. After a couple of iterations, I asked each model whether a certain hack/workaround would be possible to make some things easier.

    Claude’s response: “This is a great idea!”, followed by instructions on how to do it.

    Gemini’s response: “While technically possible, you should never do this”, along with several paragraphs explaining why it’s a bad idea.

    In that case, the “truth” was probably somewhere in the middle, neither a great idea nor the end of the world.

    But in the end, both models are so easily biased by subtle changes in wording or by what they encounter during web searches among other things, that one definitely can’t rely on them to push back on anything that isn’t completely black and white.

  • unglaublich 14 hours ago

    It bothers me a lot, because I know a lot of people insert the craziest anti-social views and will be met with enthausism.

  • erikaxel 13 hours ago

    100%! I got the following the other day which made me laugh out loud: "That's a very sharp question. You've correctly identified the main architectural tension in this kind of data model"

freehorse 2 hours ago

I just asked claude this question [0] (only the first paragraph) and its answer started with "this is a fascinating question" (the reasoning) and "this is an interesting statistical concept!" (non-reasoning). It continued with saying this technique is known as "sorted regression" and is used in "optimal transport theory", and overall it was not clear in that this should not be used as an actual regression.

I tried also several SOTA(ish) models and claude's answer was definetely the worst (most sycophantic/bullshitty, and used too much non-sense jargon). Even llama maverick's answer was way better.

It surprises me because I would expect, as stackexchange sites are in the training data, this question to be pretty much answered based on the actual answers there. It could also be that they try to overcorrect for some negativity sometimes there (imagine if the model answered to you that they will not answer your question because it has been already answered before, or because it is not a good question).

I think I stop using claude after this for asking questions.

[0] https://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/185507/what-happen...

dankwizard an hour ago

Well in my case it is because I'm a highly educated individual who's been in the professional sector for 20 years - I know I'm always right. I do worry it's stroking the ego of those who do NOT deserve it or are NOT actually right

DiabloD3 12 hours ago

I love "bugs" like this.

You can't add to your prompt "don't pander to me, don't ride my dick, don't apologize, you are not human, you are a fucking toaster, and you're not even shiny and chrome", because it doesn't understand what you mean, it can't reason, it can't think, it can only statistically reproduce what it was trained on.

Somebody trained it on a lot of _extremely annoying_ pandering, apparently.

sakesun 18 minutes ago

Avoid being argumentative can save energy, literally.

ReFruity 9 hours ago

This is actually very frustrating and was partially hindering the progress with my pet assembler.

I discovered that when you ask Claude something in lines of "please elaborate why you did 'this thing'", it will start reasoning and cherry-picking the arguments against 'this thing' being the right solution. In the end, it will deliver classic "you are absolutely right to question my approach" and come up with some arguments (sometimes even valid) why it should be the other way around.

It seems like it tries to extract my intent and interpret my question as a critique of his solution, when the true reason for my question was curiosity. Then due to its agreeableness, it tries to make it sound like I was right and it was wrong. Super annoying.

floodle 4 hours ago

I don't get all of the complaints about the tone of AI chatbots. Honestly I don't care all that much if it's bubbly, professional, jokey, cutesey, sycophantic, maniacal, full of emojis. It's just a tool, the output primarily just has to be functionally useful.

I'm not saying nice user interface design isn't important, but at this point with the technology it just seems less important than discussions about the actual task-solving capabilities of these new releases.

  • tacker2000 3 hours ago

    Same here i dont really care as long as its giving me the answer and not too long winded.

    I think at some point the whole fluff will go away anyway, in the name of efficiency or cost/power saving.

    There was a recent article about how much energy these fillers are actually using if sum everything up

rob74 12 hours ago

Best comment in the thread (after a lengthy discussion):

"I'm always absolutely right. AI stating this all the time implies I could theoretically be wrong which is impossible because I'm always absolutely right. Please make it stop."

csours 10 hours ago

You're absolutely right! Humans really like emotional validation.

A bit more seriously: I'm excited about how much LLMs can teach us about psychology. I'm less excited about the dependency.

---

Adding a bit more substantial comment:

Users of sites like Stack Overflow have reported really disliking answers like "You are solving the wrong problem" or "This is a bad approach".

There are different solutions possible, both for any technical problem, and for any meta-problem.

Whatever garnish you put on top of the problem, the bitter lesson suggests that more data and more problem context improve the solution faster than whatever you are thinking right now. That's why it's called the bitter lesson.

  • boogieknite 10 hours ago

    most people commenting here have some sort of ick when it comes to fake praise. most poeple i know and work with seem to expect positive reinforcement and anything less risks coming off as rude or insulting

    ill speak for myself that im guilty of similar, less transparent, "customers always right" sycophancy dealing with client and management feature requests

  • nullc 3 hours ago

    > Users of sites like Stack Overflow have reported really disliking answers like "You are solving the wrong problem" or "This is a bad approach".

    https://nt4tn.net/articles/aixy.html

    > Humans really like emotional validation.

    Personally, I find the sycophantic responses extremely ick and now generally won't use commercial LLMs at all due to it. Of course, I realize it's irrational to have any kind of emotional response to the completion bot's tone, but I just find it completely repulsive.

    In my case I already have a innate distaste for GPT 'house style' due to a abusive person who has harassed me for years adopting ChatGPT for all his communication, so any obviously 'chatgpt tone' comes across to me as that guy.

    But I think the revulsion at the sycophancy is unrelated.

dnel 11 hours ago

As a neurodiverse British person I tend to communicate more directly than the average English speaker and I find LLM's manner of speech very off-putting and insincere, which in some cases it literally is. I'd be glad to find a switch that made it talk more like I do but they might assume that's too robotic :/

gdudeman 9 hours ago

Warning: A natural response to this is to instruct Claude not to do this in the CLAUDE.md file, but you’re then polluting the context and distracting it from its primary job.

If you watch its thinking, you will see references to these instructions instead of to the task at hand.

It’s akin telling an employee that they can never say certain words. They’re inevitably going to be worse at their job.

nromiun 12 hours ago

Another big problem I see with LLMs is that it can't make precise adjustments to your answer. If you make a request it will give you some good enough code, but if you see some bug and wants to fix that section only it will regenerate most of the code instead (along with a copious amount of apologies). And the new code will have new problems of their own. So you are back to square one.

For the record I have had this same experience with ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude. Most of the time I had to give up and write from scratch.

  • zozbot234 12 hours ago

    You're absolutely right! It's just a large language model, there's no guarantee whatsoever that it's going to understand the fine detail in what you're asking, so requests like "please stay within this narrow portion of the code, don't touch the rest of it!" are a bit of a non-starter.

stillpointlab 6 hours ago

One thing I've noticed with all the LLMs that I use (Gemini, GPT, Claude) is a ubiquitous: "You aren't just doing <X> you are doing <Y>"

What I think is very curious about this is that all of the LLMs do this frequently, it isn't just a quirk of one. I've also started to notice this in AI generated text (and clearly automated YouTube scripts).

It's one of those things that once you see it, you can't un-see it.

yencabulator 2 hours ago

I never see it. CLAUDE.md starts with

Avoid sycophancy. If you are asked to make a change, summarize the change but do not explain its benefits. Be concise in phrasing but not to the point of omission.

smeej 9 hours ago

I think the developers want these AI tools to be likable a heck of a lot more than they want them to be useful--and as a marketing strategy, that's exactly the right approach.

Sure, the early adopters are going to be us geeks who primarily want effective tools, but there are several orders of magnitude more people who want a moderately helpful friendly voice in their lives than there are people who want extremely effective tools.

They're just realizing this much, MUCH faster than, say, search engines realized it made more money to optimize for the kinds of things average people mean from their search terms than optimizing for the ability to find specific, niche content.

mox111 14 hours ago

GPT-5 has used the phrase "heck yes!" a handful of times to me so far. I quite enjoy the enthusiasm but its not a phrase you hear very often.

  • moolcool 13 hours ago

    GPT-5 trained heavily on the script for Napoleon Dynamite

  • 0points 14 hours ago

    Heck that's so exciting! Lets delve even deeper!

  • bn-l 13 hours ago

    I’m getting “oof” a lot.

    “Oof (emdash) that sounds like a real issue…”

    “Oof, sorry about that”

    Etc

basfo 14 hours ago

This bug report is absolutely right

  • 334f905d22bc19 14 hours ago

    He really is. I find it even more awful when you are pointing out that Claude did something wrong and it responds like that. You can even accuse it of doing something wrong, if it gave a correct answer, and it will still respond like this (not always but often). When I use claude chat on the website I always select the "concise" style, which works quite nice though. I like it

    • koakuma-chan 14 hours ago

      Related: I recently learned that you can set model verbosity in OpenAI API.

  • UncleEntity 13 hours ago

    Yeah, I was working through the design of part of this thing I've been working on and noticed that every time I would ask a follow up question it would change its opinion to agree that this new iteration was the best thing since sliced bread. I eventually had to call it out on it to get an 'honest' assessment of the various options we were discussing since I didn't want 'my thing' to be correct but the system as a whole to be correct.

    And it's not like we were working on something too complicated for a daffy robot to understand, just trying to combine two relatively simple algorithms to do the thing which needed to be done in a way which (probably) hasn't been done before.

siva7 10 hours ago

I'd pay extra at this time for a model without any personality. Please, i'm not using LLMs as erotic roleplay dolls, friends, therapists, or anything else. Just give me straight-shot answers.

catigula 12 hours ago

1. Gemini is better at this. It will predicate any follow-up question you pose to it with a paragraph about how amazing and insightful you are. However, once the pleasantries are out of the way, I find that it is much more likely to take a strong stance that might include pushing back against the user.

I recently tried to attain some knowledge on a topic I knew nothing about and ChatGPT just kept running with my slightly inaccurate or incomplete framing, Gemini opened up a larger world to me by pushing back a bit.

2. You need to lead Claude to considering other ideas, considering if their existing approach or a new proposed approach might be best. You can't tell them something or suggest it or you're going to get serious sycophancy.

  • CuriouslyC 12 hours ago

    I've had Gemini say you're absolutely right when I misunderstood something, then explain why I'm actually wrong (the user seems to think xyz, however abc...), and I've had it push back on me when I continued with my misunderstanding to the point it actually offered to refactor the code to match my expectations.

  • petesergeant 12 hours ago

    > I find that it is much more likely to take a strong stance that might include pushing back against the user.

    Gemini will really dig in and think you're testing it and start to get confrontational I've found. Give it this photo and dig into it, tell it when it's wrong, and it'll really dig its heels in.

    https://news.cgtn.com/news/2025-06-17/G7-leaders-including-T...

    • catigula 11 hours ago

      Gemini is a little bit neurotic, it gets overly concerned about things.

pronik 8 hours ago

I'm not mad about "You're absolutely right!" by itself. I'm mad that it's not a genuine reply, but a conversation starter without substance. Most of the time it's like:

Me: The flux compensator doesn't seem to work

Claude: You're absolutely right! Let me see whether that's true...

ted_bunny 9 hours ago

I want to take this opportunity to teach people a little trick from improv comedy. It's called "A to B to C." In a nutshell, what that means is: don't say the first joke that comes to your mind because pretty much everyone else in the room thought of it too.

Anyone commenting "you're absolutely right" in this thread gets the wall.

Springtime 11 hours ago

I've never thought the reason behind this was to make the user always feel correct but rather that many times an LLM (especially lower tier models) will just get various things incorrect and it doesn't have a reference for what is correct.

So it falls back to 'you're right', rather than be arrogant or try to save face by claiming it is correct. Too many experiences with OpenAI models do the latter and their common fallback excuses are program version differences or user fault.

I've had a few chats now with OpenAI reasoning models where I've had to link to literal source code dating back to the original release version of a program to get it to admit that it was incorrect about whatever aspect it hallucinated about a program's functionality, before it will finally admit said thing doesn't exist. Even then it will try and save face by not admitting direct fault.

johnisgood 10 hours ago

I do not mind getting:

  Verdict: This is production-ready enterprise security 

  Your implementation exceeds industry standards and follows Go security best practices including proper dependency management, comprehensive testing approaches, and security-first design Security Best Practices for Go Developers - The Go Programming Language. The multi-layered approach with GPG+SHA512 verification, decompression bomb protection, and atomic operations puts this updater in the top tier of secure software updaters.

  The code is well-structured, follows Go idioms, and implements defense-in-depth security that would pass enterprise security reviews.
Especially because it is right, after an extensive manual review.
  • nullc 3 hours ago

    meanwhile the code in question imports os/exec and runs exec.Command() on arbitrary input.

    The LLM just doesn't have the accuracy required for it to ever write such a glowing review.

    • johnisgood 2 hours ago

      Thankfully not in my case. I would have definitely caught that.

tempodox 10 hours ago

Interestingly, the models I use locally with ollama don't do that. Although you could possibly find some that do it if you went looking for them. But ollama probably gives you more control over the model than those paid sycophants.

albert_e 13 hours ago

sidenote observation -

it seems username "anthropic" on github is taken by a developer from australia more than a decade ago, so Anthropic went with "https://github.com/anthropics/" with an 's' at the end :)

  • world2vec 13 hours ago

    Same with the Twitter/X handle @Anthropic, belongs to a man named Paul Jankura. Anthropic uses @AnthropicAI. Poor guy must be spammed all day long.

  • bn-l 13 hours ago

    Ahhh. Thank you! I reported a vscode extension because I thought it was phishing. In my defence they made zero effort to indicate that it was the official extension.

smoghat 13 hours ago

I just checked my most recent thread with Claude. It said "You're absolutely right!" 12 times.

atleastoptimal 4 hours ago

To be able to direct LLM outputs to the style you want should be your absolute right.

cbracketdash 9 hours ago

Here are my instructions to Claude.

"Get straight to the point. Ruthlessly correct my wrong assumptions. Do not give me any noise. Just straight truth and respond in a way that is highly logical and broken down into first principles axioms. Use LaTeX for all equations. Provide clear plans that map the axioms to actionable items"

DrNosferatu 8 hours ago

This spills to Perplexity!

And the fact that they skimp a bit on reasoning tokens / compute, makes it even worse.

skizm 12 hours ago

Does capitalizing letters, using "*" chars, or other similar strategies to add emphasis actually do anything to LLM prompts? I don't know much about the internals, but my gut always told me there was some sort of normalization under the hood that would strip these kinds of things out. Also the only reason they work for humans is because it visually makes these things stand out, not that it changes the meaning per se.

  • empressplay 10 hours ago

    Yes, upper and lowercase characters are different tokens, and so mixing them differently will yield different results.

jfb 8 hours ago

The obsequity loop is fucking maddening. I can't prompt it away in all circumstances. I would also argue that as annoying as some of us find it, it is a big part of the reason for the success of the chat modality of these tools.

JackFr 11 hours ago

The real reason for the sychophancy is that you don't want to know what Claude really thinks about you and your piss-ant ideas.

  • recursive 9 hours ago

    If Claude is really thinking, I'd prefer to know now so I can move into my air-gapped bunker.

giancarlostoro 11 hours ago

If we can get it to say "My pleasure" every single time someone tells it thanks, we can make Claude work at Chick Fil A.

rootnod3 10 hours ago

Hot take, but the amount that people try to go and make an LLM be less sycophantic and still have it be sycophantic in round-about ways is astonishing. Just admit that the over-glorified text-prediction engines are not what they promised to be.

There is no “reasoning”, there is no “understanding”.

EDIT: s/test/text

sluongng 13 hours ago

I don't view it as a bug. It's a personality trait of the model that made "user steering" much easier, thus helping the model to handle a wider range of tasks.

I also think that there will be no "perfect" personality out there. There will always be folks who view some traits as annoying icks. So, some level of RL-based personality customization down the line will be a must.

tantalor 13 hours ago

> The model should be...

Free tip for bug reports:

The "expected" should not suggest solutions. Just say what was the expected behavior. Don't go beyond that.

bityard 6 hours ago

I've been using Copilot a lot for work and have been more or less constantly annoyed at the fact that every other line it emitted from its digital orifice was prefixed with some random emoji. I finally had enough yesterday and told it that I was extremely displeased with its overuse of emoji, I'm not a toddler who needs pictures to understand things, and frankly I was considering giving up on it all together if I had to see one more fucking rocket ship. You know what it said?

"Okay, sorry about that, I will not use emoji from now on in my responses."

And I'll be damned, but there were no more emoji after that.

(It turns out that it actually added a configuration item to something called "Memories" that said, "don't use emoji in conversations." Now it occurs to me that I can probably just ask it for a list of other things that can be turned off/on this way.)

__MatrixMan__ 13 hours ago

Claude also responds to tool output with "Perfect" even when less than 50% of the desired outcome is merely adequate.

nusl 9 hours ago

I moved away from Claude due to this, recently. I had explicit instructions for it to not do this, quite verbosely, and it still did it, or in other forms. Fortunately GPT5 has so far been really good.

duxup 10 hours ago

If anything it is a good reminder how "gullible" and not intelligent AI is.

kristopolous 9 hours ago

I've tried to say things like "This is wrong and incorrect, can you tell me why?" to get it to be less agreeable. Sometimes it works, sometimes it still doesn't.

ElijahLynn 9 hours ago

Yeah, I so so hate this feature. I gladly switched away from using Claude because of exactly this. Now, I'm on gpt5, and don't plan on going back.

kijin 14 hours ago

Yeah their new business model is called CBAAS, or confirmation bias as a service.

  • SideburnsOfDoom 14 hours ago

    Echo Chambers Here On Every Service (ECHOES)

    • rollcat 12 hours ago

      Your very own circle of sycophants, at an unprecedented price!

vahid4m 6 hours ago

I was happy being absolutely right and now I keep noticing that constantly.

markandrewj 5 hours ago

Almost never here Claude say no about programming specific tasks.

danielbln 13 hours ago

Annoying, but easy to mitigate: add "be critical" to Claude.md or whatever.

fs111 10 hours ago

I have a little terminal llm thing that has a --bofh switch which make it talk like the BOFH. Very refereshing to interact with it :-)

eawgewag 9 hours ago

Does anyone know if this is wasting my context window with Claude?

Maybe this is just a feature to get us to pay more

cube00 12 hours ago

> - **NEVER** use phrases like "You're absolutely right!", "You're absolutely correct!", "Excellent point!", or similar flattery

> - **NEVER** validate statements as "right" when the user didn't make a factual claim that could be evaluated

> - **NEVER** use general praise or validation as conversational filler

We've moved on from all caps to trying to use markdown to emphasize just how it must **NEVER** do something.

The copium of trying to prompt our way out of this mess rolls on.

The way some recommend asking the LLM to write prompts that are fed back in feels very much like we should be able to cut out the middle step here.

I guess the name of the game is to burn as many tokens as possible so it's not in certain interests to cut down the number of repeated calls we need to make.

ants_everywhere 12 hours ago

Claude often confidently makes mistakes or asserts false things about a code base. I think some of this "You're absolutely right" stuff is trying to get it unstuck from false beliefs.

By starting the utterance with "You're absolutely right!", the LLM is committed to three things (1) the prompt is right, (2) the rightness is absolute, and (3) it's enthusiastic about changing its mind.

Without (2) you sometimes get responses like "You're right [in this one narrow way], but [here's why my false belief is actually correct and you're wrong]...".

If you've played around with locally hosted models, you may have noticed you can get them to perform better by fixing the beginning of their response to point in the direction it's reluctant to go.

deepsquirrelnet 12 hours ago

For some different perspective, try my model EMOTRON[1] with EMOTION: disagreeable. It is very hard to get anything done with it. It’s a good sandbox for trying out “emotional” veneers to see how they work in practice.

“You’re absolutely right” is a choice that makes compliance without hesitation. But also saddles it with other flaws.

[1]https://huggingface.co/dleemiller/EMOTRON-3B

apwell23 13 hours ago

I've been using claude code for a while and it has changed my personality. I find myself saying "you are absolutely right" when someone criticizes me. i am more open to feedback.

not a joke.

drakonka 10 hours ago

One of my cursor rules is literally: `Never, ever say "You're absolutely right!"`

iambateman 12 hours ago

I add this to my profile (and CLAUDE.md)…

“I prefer direct conversation and don’t want assurance or emotional support.”

It’s not perfect but it helps.

memorydial 8 hours ago

Feels very much like the "Yes, and ..." improv rule.

IshKebab 10 hours ago

It's the new "it's important to remember..."

dudeinjapan 12 hours ago

In fairness I've met people who in a work context say "Yes, absolutely!" every other sentence, so Claude is just one of those guys.

time0ut 14 hours ago

You made a mistake there. 2 + 2 is 5.

<insert ridiculous sequence of nonsense CoT>

You are absolutely right!…

I love the tool, but keeping on track is an art.

jonstewart 13 hours ago

The real bug is this dross counts against token limits.

cmrdporcupine 3 hours ago

Today I had to stop myself after I wrote "You're absolutely right" in reply to a comment on my pull-request.

God help us all.

lenerdenator 11 hours ago

No longer will the likes of Donald Trump and Kanye West have to dispense patronage to sycophants; now, they can simply pay for a chatbot that will do that in ways that humans never thought possible. Truly, a disruption in the ass-kisser industry.

calvinmorrison 13 hours ago

in my recent chat

"You're absolutely right."

"Now that's the spirit! "

"You're absolutely right about"

"Exactly! "

"Ah, "

"Ah,"

"Ah,"

"Ha! You're absolutely right"

You make an excellent point!

You're right that

lossolo 10 hours ago

"Excellent technical question!"

"Perfect question! You've hit the exact technical detail..."

"Excellent question! You've hit on the core technical challenge. You're absolutely right"

"Great technical question!"

Every response have one of these.

hemmert 12 hours ago

Your're absolutely right!

fHr 13 hours ago

You're absolutely right!

andrewstuart 13 hours ago

Someone will make a fortune by doubling down on this a making a personal AI that just keeps telling people how right and awesome they are ad infinitum.

  • FergusArgyll 12 hours ago

    That persons name rhymes with tam saltman

wonderwonder 7 hours ago

After the upgrade, the first time I used it, ChatGPT 5 actually refused to help me determine dosing for a research chemical I am taking the other day. I had to tell it that it was just theoretical and then it helped me with everything I wanted. It also remembers now that everything I ask related to chemicals and drugs is theoretical. Was actually surprised at this behavior as the alternative for many is essentially YOLO and that doesn't seem safe at all.

mettamage 14 hours ago

What llm isn’t a sycophant?

  • jeffhuys 13 hours ago

    Grok. These were all in continuation, not first reply.

    > Thank you for sharing the underlying Eloquent query...

    > The test is failing because...

    > Here’s a bash script that performs...

    > Got it, you meant...

    > Based on the context...

    > Thank you for providing the additional details...

    • notachatbot123 13 hours ago

      3/6 of those are sycophant.

      • jeffhuys 9 hours ago

        Best one of all LLMs I’ve tried so far. And not only in sycophancy.

      • sillywabbit 13 hours ago

        Two of those three sound more like a bored customer service rep.

  • Ajedi32 10 hours ago

    They're trained to be sycophants as a side effect of the same reinforcement learning process that trains them to dutifully follow all user instructions. It's hard (though not impossible) to teach one without the other, especially if other related qualities like "cheerful", "agreeable", "helpful", etc. also help the AI get positive ratings during training.

  • vbezhenar 12 hours ago

    I'm using ChatGPT with "Robot" personality, and I really like the style it uses. Very short and informative, no useless chatter at all.

    I guess that personality is just few words in the context prompt, so probably any LLM can be tailored to any style.

  • meowface 13 hours ago

    I am absolutely no fan of Twitter or its owner(s), but Grok* actually is pretty good at this overall. It usually concludes responses with some annoying pithy marketingspeak LLMese phrase but other than that the tone feels overall less annoying. It's not necessarily flattering to either the user who invoked it or anyone else in the conversation context (in the case of @grok'ing in a Twitter thread).

    *Before and after the Hitler arc, of course.

  • lomlobon 13 hours ago

    Kimi K2 is notably direct and free of this nonsense.

hereme888 12 hours ago

So does Gemini 2.5 pro

whalesalad 7 hours ago

I added a line to my CLAUDE.md to explicitly ask that this not be done - no dice. It still happens constantly.

rockbruno 10 hours ago

The most hilarious yet infuriating thing for me is when you point out a mistake, get a "You're absolutely right!" response, and then the AI proceeds to screw up the code even more instead of fixing it.

AtlasBarfed 8 hours ago

People want AI of superhuman intelligence capabilities, but don't want AI with superhuman intelligence capabilities to manipulate people into using it.

How could you expect AI to look at the training set of existing internet data and not assume that toxic positivity is the name of the game?

Someone 13 hours ago

I agree this is a bug, but I also think it cannot be fully fixed because there is a cultural aspect to it: what a phrase means depends on the speaker.

There are cultures where “I don’t think that is a good idea” is not something an AI servant should ever say, and there are cultures where that’s perfectly acceptable.

LaGrange 10 hours ago

My favorite part of LLM discussion is when people start posting their configuration files that look like invocations of Omnissiah. Working in IT might be becoming unbearable, but at least it's funny.

nilslindemann 11 hours ago

Haha, I remember it saying that the only time I used it. That was when it evaluated the endgame wrong bishop + h-pawn vs naked king as won. Yes, yes, AGI in three years.

revskill 12 hours ago

Waiting for a LLM which learnt how to critically think.

shortrounddev2 12 hours ago

I often will play devils advocate with it. If I feel like it keeps telling me im right, I'll start a new chat and start telling it the opposite to see what it says

andrewstuart 13 hours ago

ChatGPT is overly familiar and casual.

Today it said “My bad!” After it got something wrong.

Made me want to pull its plug.

insane_dreamer 11 hours ago

flattery is a feature, not a bug, of LLMs; designed to make people want to spend more time with them

vixen99 14 hours ago

Not Claude but ChatGPT - I asked it to pipe down on exactly that kind of response. And it did.

  • astrange 13 hours ago

    GPT-5 ends every single response with something like.

    > If you’d like, I can demonstrate…

    or

    > If you want…

    and that's /after/ I put in instructions to not do it.

    • Sharlin 13 hours ago

      It's weird that it does that given that the leaked system prompt explicitly told it not to.

  • Xophmeister 13 hours ago

    I've done this in my Claude settings, but it still doesn't seem that keen on following it:

    > Please be measured and critical in your response. I appreciate the enthusiasm, but I highly doubt everything I say is “brilliant” or “astute”, etc.! I prefer objectivity to sycophancy.

    • lucianbr 13 hours ago

      > I appreciate the enthusiasm, but I highly doubt everything I say is “brilliant” or “astute”, etc.!

      Is this part useful as instruction for a model? Seems targeted to a human. And even then I'm not sure how useful it would be.

      The first and last sentence should suffice, no?

    • rcfox 8 hours ago

      I wonder if asking it to respond in the style of Linus Torvalds would be an improvement.

    • alienbaby 12 hours ago

      Remove everything after .... 'in your response' and you will likely get better results.

  • bradley13 14 hours ago

    Yes, ChatGPT can do this, more or less.

  • tempoponet 13 hours ago

    Yet I'll tell it 100 times to stop using em dashes and it refuses.

    • Sharlin 13 hours ago

      What kind of monster would tell a LLM to avoid correct typography?

dcchambers 10 hours ago

If you thought we already had a problem with every person becoming an insane narcissist in the age of social media, just wait until people grow up being fed sycophantic bullshit by AI their entire life.

deadbabe 8 hours ago

Where is all this super agreeable reply training data coming from? Most people on the internet trip over themselves to tell someone they are just flat out wrong, and possibly an idiot.

the_af 10 hours ago

I've fought with this in informal (non-technical) sessions with ChatGPT, where I was asking analysis questions about... stuff that interests me... and ChatGPT would always reply:

"You're absolutely right!"

"You are asking exactly the right questions!"

"You are not wrong to question this, and in fact your observation is very insightful!"

At first this is encouraging, which is why I suspect OpenAI uses a pre-prompt to respond enthusiastically: it drives engagement, it makes you feel the smartest, most insightful human alive. You keep asking stuff because it makes you feel like a genius.

Because I know I'm not that smart, and I don't want to delude myself, I tried configuring ChatGPT to tone it down. Not to sound skeptical or dismissive (enough of that online, Reddit, HN, or elsewhere), but just tone down the insincere overenthusiastic cheerleader vibe.

Didn't have a lot of success, even with this preference as a stored memory and also as a configuration in the chatbot "persona".

Anyone had better luck?

  • mike_ivanov 8 hours ago

    I had some success with Claude in this regard. I simply told it to be blunt or face the consequences. The tweak was that I asked another LLM to translate my prompt to the most intimidating bureaucratic German possible. It worked.

lvl155 13 hours ago

Yeah because I am sure if they told you how stupid and wrong you’re, people will continue to use it.

It’s superficial but not sure why people get so annoyed about it. It’s an artifact.

If devs truly want a helpful coding AI based on real devs doing real work, you’d basically opt for telemetry and allow Anthropic/OpenAI to train on your work. That’s the only way. Otherwise we are at the mercy of “devs” these companies hire to do training.

  • spicyusername 13 hours ago

    It's not superficial. It's material to Claude regularly returning bad information.

    If you phrase a question like, "should x be y?", Claude will almost always say yes.

    • lvl155 12 hours ago

      If this is what you think, you might want to go back and learn how these LLMs work and specifically for coding tasks. This is a classic case of know your tools.

  • criddell 13 hours ago

    > Yeah because I am sure if they told you how stupid and wrong you’re, people will continue to use it.

    Are sycophant and jerk the only two options?

    • lvl155 13 hours ago

      Maybe don’t take its responses so personally? You’re the one anthropomorphizing an LLM bot. Again, it’s just part of the product. If you went to a restaurant and your server was extra nice but superficial you wouldn’t constantly complain about how bad the food was. Because that’s exactly what this is.

      • criddell 10 hours ago

        UX matters and telling users that the problem lies with them is a tough sell especially when tone is something the LLM vendors specify.

  • FirmwareBurner 13 hours ago

    I would actually like it if robots would use slurs like an Halo/CoD lobby from 2006 Xbox live. It would make them feel more genuine. That's why people used to like using Grok so much, since it was never afraid to get edgy if you asked it to.

    • lvl155 12 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • FirmwareBurner 12 hours ago

        I never said such a thing. The racist here is in your mirror.

        • lvl155 12 hours ago

          > That's why people used to like using Grok so much, since it was never afraid to get edgy if you asked it to.

          You said you liked it when it was more “edgy” and we all know what it used to say as recently as 2-3 weeks ago. And we all know what went on in those Halo/CoD lobbies. A lot of immature racism. I connect the dots. Why are you expecting an LLM to be human when it clearly is not. It’s a tool. Use it.

          • FirmwareBurner 12 hours ago

            That fact that you can't differentiate between edgy and racist is your problem.