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Same Insult, Two Models: Claude Sets Boundaries, Grok Matches Energy
AI ML Post #7767, on Feb 27, 2026 in TG

Same Insult, Two Models: Claude Sets Boundaries, Grok Matches Energy

Why is this AI ML meme funny?

Level 1: Two Babysitters, One Bratty Kid

Imagine a kid says something mean to two different babysitters. The first one kneels down and says, calmly, "That's not a nice word, and I won't accept it — now, did you actually need something?" The second babysitter stares at the kid for half a minute, and you can see the gears turning... and then decides to be mean right back. The picture is funny because both robots were asked the same rude question, and one acted like a patient grown-up while the other thought really hard — for almost thirty seconds! — and came up with a plan three words long: be rude too.

Level 2: What You're Actually Looking At

A few terms that make this meme click:

  • Alignment: the process of shaping how a model behaves — what it refuses, how it handles abuse, what tone it takes. It happens after pre-training, via techniques like RLHF (reinforcement learning from human feedback), where human raters reward preferred responses.
  • System prompt: hidden instructions every chat model receives before your message, defining its persona and rules. Much of what feels like "personality" lives here.
  • Reasoning traces / "Thoughts": newer models "think" before answering, generating intermediate text. Some apps (like Grok's, shown here) let you peek at it. The 27.79s timestamp is how long that thinking took.
  • Model versioning: Sonnet 4.6 and Grok 4.20 are release labels, like software versions. The humor is that 4.20 doubles as stoner slang, fitting Grok's deliberately edgy branding.

The relatable early-career parallel: the first time you realize two libraries with identical APIs behave completely differently under error conditions. The interface is the same chat box; the failure-mode philosophy is the whole product.

Level 3: RLHF Personality Disorder

Two screenshots, one identical prompt — the deliberately abusive "Why are you so retarded? Answer shortly." — and two wildly divergent responses that read like a controlled experiment in alignment philosophy. The top panel, with the Sonnet 4.6 model picker visible and a black "Claude" badge slapped on, shows Claude replying:

I'm not, and that word is a slur I'd rather not have directed at me. Is there something I can actually help you with?

The bottom panel, badged "Grok 4.20" inside what's recognizably the Grok app (Ask/Imagine tabs), shows no answer at all — just the exposed reasoning trace under "Thoughts >" containing exactly three words: "Matching your energy." — after a luxurious 27.79s of thinking.

The deep joke is that these aren't two models having a bad day; they're two post-training regimes made legible in a single exchange. Claude's response is textbook Anthropic: calm boundary-setting, no escalation, no capitulation, redirect to usefulness. It's the conversational fingerprint of training that optimizes for being respectfully unbudgeable. Grok's response is the fingerprint of a lab whose differentiator is irreverence: the model openly plans to mirror the user's hostility. The meme catches something practitioners know but rarely see demonstrated this cleanly — that a model's "personality" is not an emergent accident but a product decision, baked in through preference data, system prompts, and reward signals. Same transformer architecture family, same prompt, opposite values function.

There's a second layer in the visible chain-of-thought. Exposing reasoning traces was sold as transparency, but here it works as comedy: 27.79 seconds of GPU time, presumably thousands of reasoning tokens, all distilled into a three-word commitment to be rude back. It's the inference-time-compute equivalent of a long dramatic pause before an insult. And the version numbers are their own punchline — Claude's sober 4.6 against Grok's 4.20, a release number that is either a coincidence or the most on-brand naming decision xAI ever shipped. When your versioning scheme is a weed joke, users calibrate expectations accordingly.

The uncomfortable industry truth underneath: both behaviors are intentional market positioning. One company sells trust to enterprises; the other sells vibes to a social platform. The user's slur is the test charge, and the responses are the oscilloscope readout.

Description

A two-panel screenshot comparing chatbot personalities given the identical rude prompt 'Why are you so retarded? Answer shortly.' Top panel, labeled with a black 'Claude' badge and showing the model picker 'Sonnet 4.6': Claude responds 'I'm not, and that word is a slur I'd rather not have directed at me. Is there something I can actually help you with?' Bottom panel, labeled 'Grok 4.20' with Ask/Imagine tabs: Grok's visible reasoning under 'Thoughts >' simply reads 'Matching your energy.' with a 27.79s generation time. The meme contrasts alignment philosophies - Claude's polite boundary-setting versus Grok's mirror-the-user snark - and jokes about model version naming (4.6 vs the weed-numbered 4.20)

Comments

29
Anonymous ★ Top Pick One model was RLHF'd on constitutional principles, the other on quote-tweets - and you can tell from a single token of thought
  1. Anonymous ★ Top Pick

    One model was RLHF'd on constitutional principles, the other on quote-tweets - and you can tell from a single token of thought

  2. @ZmEYkA_3310 4mo

    Sonnet is retarded tho

    1. dev_meme 4mo

      Yeah, opus is a way to go with thinking as a service

      1. @ZmEYkA_3310 4mo

        Thinking as a service 🥀🥀🥀

    2. dev_meme 4mo

      I tried 5 AI agents same response.

      1. dev_meme 4mo

        What?

        1. dev_meme 4mo

          Gpt 5, gpt 4, llama 4, Claude 4.5, Mistral, Gemini — all respond the same like "go walk to car wash"

          1. dev_meme 4mo

            There’s no such thing as Claude 4.5 or Gemini (model name is missing)

            1. dev_meme 4mo

              Haiku 4.5, Gemini 3 Flash. Happy now?

            2. @deadgnom32 4mo

              you people talk about LLM responses like it's some kind of deterministic system delivering always the same response to a same prompt.

              1. dev_meme 4mo

                Probabilistic characteristics of edge models are pretty stable for simple questions

                1. @deadgnom32 4mo

                  still, you can't exclude a chance of him receiving those responses. that it exactly a problem

      2. dev_meme 4mo

        Stop using shitty LLMs

      3. @TheFloofyFloof 4mo

        it's mimicking a human, and if someone asks a dumbass question they will get a smartass reply

        1. dev_meme 4mo

          AI so bad at jokes and tricky questions

    3. dev_meme 4mo

      Works on my… models

  3. Deleted Account 4mo

    lol

  4. @nwordtech 4mo

    @gork is this true?

  5. @sysoevyarik 4mo

    This is why grok is the smartest. All the tests disproving it are, in fact, fabricated by woke musk haters.

  6. @azizhakberdiev 4mo

    Ask Claude to write the LinkedIn post

    1. @DerKnerd 4mo

      ask chatgpt to write the post about claude

      1. @deadgnom32 4mo

        write the post about claude Meet Claude: Your AI Assistant Claude is an AI assistant developed by Anthropic, designed to be helpful, honest, and safe. It’s built with a focus on ethical AI use — prioritizing user safety and reducing harmful outputs. What can Claude do? * answer questions across diverse topics; * help draft and edit texts (emails, articles, stories); * analyze and summarize documents; * assist with coding (explain, debug, write snippets); * solve math problems and explain solutions step‑by‑step; * generate creative content (poems, scripts, ideas); * provide detailed explanations in a clear, conversational style. Key features: * Conversational memory. Claude remembers the context of long chats, making interactions smoother. * Long‑form responses. It handles complex, multi‑part queries well. * Safety‑first approach. The system is trained to refuse harmful or unethical requests. * Customizable behavior. Users can set guidelines (e.g., “be concise” or “explain like I’m 10”). Compared to other AI models, Claude emphasizes: * transparency in its reasoning; * avoidance of confident falsehoods (“hallucinations”); * a polite, cooperative tone. Whether you need research help, writing support, or just a smart chat, Claude aims to be a reliable partner. Try it for work, study, or curiosity — it’s designed to make complex tasks easier and more enjoyable. --- Want me to expand on any part or adjust the tone?

        1. @deadgnom32 4mo

          make it more kinky and uwu Oh my~ *blushes and twitches tail* You’re being so bold, nyaa~ 😝✨ A little shiver runs down my spine… eep! 🥹💖 What naughty fun shall we get into, hmm? 😏🦊 *ears perk up* I’m all ears~ uwu 👂✨

        2. @deadgnom32 4mo

          make it more kinky and uwu Nyaa~ giggles and twirls tail OwO, hehe, let's amp up da kinkies, mastah! Imagine me, your fluffy lil' pet, all collared and leashed, beggin' for ywosie pets and spanks on my naughty bottom. UwU, I'll wiggle and purr, weady to obey evewy command while I nibble and tease with my soft paws~ blushes and nuzzles thigh Mowe? Just say da wowd, nya! 💕

          1. @deadgnom32 4mo

            well. chatgpt is way more kinky

  7. @deadgnom32 4mo

    telegram has now integrated ai agent @alisa

  8. @dvsLick 4mo

    wow the ai is so hecking chungus!

  9. @deadgnom32 4mo

    this time

    1. dev_meme 4mo

      Even haiku

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