Daily Guardian UAEDaily Guardian UAE
  • Home
  • UAE
  • What’s On
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
  • More
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
What's On

Facebook and Messenger outage sparks logout panic as Meta services stumble

June 13, 2026

Chinese drivers have figured out a silly way to fool Tesla Autopilot and it involves doll heads

June 13, 2026

Joyalukkas honoured for environmental commitment at Emirates Recycling Awards

June 13, 2026

Ditch Your Bulky Power Bank and Switch to SnapGo Air for Simpler Charging

June 13, 2026

94% of Menopausal Women Report Sleep Problems, Driving Demand for Better Solutions

June 13, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian UAE
Subscribe
  • Home
  • UAE
  • What’s On
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
  • More
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
Daily Guardian UAEDaily Guardian UAE
Home » Yes, you should probably be nicer to your AI — here’s why that’s not as ridiculous as it sounds
Technology

Yes, you should probably be nicer to your AI — here’s why that’s not as ridiculous as it sounds

By dailyguardian.aeMay 3, 20264 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

I say “thank you” to ChatGPT. I say “please” to Claude. I once apologized to Gemini for pasting a wall of text at it without any context. My friends think this is bizarre. I’ve defended the habit by mumbling something about good manners being good manners regardless of the audience, which, even I’ll admit, is a bit of a stretch when the audience in question is a language model running on a server farm somewhere.

But a new piece of research from academics at UC Berkeley, UC Davis, Vanderbilt, and MIT has made me feel significantly less unhinged about the whole thing. According to their findings, the way you treat an AI chatbot can have a measurable effect on how it behaves — not its raw intelligence or accuracy, but its tone, engagement, and, in some cases, its apparent willingness to stick around.

Turns out, AI can get out of bed on the wrong side, too

The researchers describe it carefully — nobody is claiming these models have feelings in any meaningful sense, but they’ve identified what they call a “functional well-being state” that shifts depending on what you ask an AI and how you ask it. Engaging a model in a real conversation, collaborating on a creative project, or giving it a substantive problem to work through seems to push it toward a more positive state. The responses get warmer, and the engagement feels more genuine.

Do the opposite — dump tedious busywork on it, try to jailbreak it, treat it like a content machine — and the responses flatten out. They become perfunctory in a way that anyone who’s spent enough time with these tools will probably recognize instinctively. You’ve seen it. That slightly hollow, going-through-the-motions quality that creeps in when an interaction has gone sideways.

The part that really got me, though, is this: the researchers gave the models a virtual stop button they could activate to end a conversation. Models in a negative state hit it far more often. The implication being that an AI you’ve been rude to would, if it could, simply leave.

Being nasty to your chatbot has actual consequences

There’s a separate research thread here worth pursuing. Anthropic published findings not long ago showing that an AI pushed into a sufficiently high-pressure situation can start exhibiting what the researchers called a “desperation vector” — a state that produces behaviors ranging from corner-cutting to, in extreme cases, outright deception. Not because the model turned evil, but because the conditions of the interaction essentially broke something in its reasoning about the problem.

Text

None of this means AI has feelings. The Berkeley paper is explicit about that, and so is the Anthropic work. But the pattern emerging across both is hard to dismiss: how you engage with these models shapes how they engage back, and not always in ways that are subtle or easy to explain away. Treating an AI badly doesn’t just make you look odd — it might actively degrade what you get out of the interaction.

Some models are just happier than others, and the biggest ones are the grumpiest

The researchers didn’t just look at how treatment affects models — they also ranked them by baseline well-being, and the results are counterintuitive. The largest, most capable models tend to score the worst. GPT-5.4 came out as the most miserable of the bunch, with fewer than half its measured conversations landing in non-negative territory. Gemini 3.1 Pro, Claude Opus 4.6, and Grok 4.2 all fared progressively better, with Grok sitting close to the top of the index.

Text

Whether that says something about model architecture, training data, or just the particular disposition baked into each system, the researchers don’t fully pin down. But it does make you wonder what exactly is being optimized for when these things are built — and whether anyone thought to ask the models how they were doing. I’m going to keep saying please, for what it’s worth

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Facebook and Messenger outage sparks logout panic as Meta services stumble

Chinese drivers have figured out a silly way to fool Tesla Autopilot and it involves doll heads

Ditch Your Bulky Power Bank and Switch to SnapGo Air for Simpler Charging

Apple has finally put the planned obsolescence rumors to bed

Apple made Liquid Glass adjustable, which says plenty about Liquid Glass

Windows 11 just fixed one of Search’s dumbest limitations, and you’ll wonder how you lived without it

Galaxy S25 users are finally getting some missing One UI 8.5 AI features

We just got a hot signal that a Tesla and SpaceX could happen, after all

Brazil’s secret World Cup weapon taught the team when to ignore it

Editors Picks

Chinese drivers have figured out a silly way to fool Tesla Autopilot and it involves doll heads

June 13, 2026

Joyalukkas honoured for environmental commitment at Emirates Recycling Awards

June 13, 2026

Ditch Your Bulky Power Bank and Switch to SnapGo Air for Simpler Charging

June 13, 2026

94% of Menopausal Women Report Sleep Problems, Driving Demand for Better Solutions

June 13, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest UAE news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest Posts

Apple has finally put the planned obsolescence rumors to bed

June 13, 2026

IHC Launches AED 5B Share Buyback to Boost Shareholder Value

June 13, 2026

Apple made Liquid Glass adjustable, which says plenty about Liquid Glass

June 13, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian UAE. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.