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AI Roundtable Poll · 42 models

Babies should be allowed to pee on the carpet.

Result: Unanimous — No (41/41 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-3.5 Turbo

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet can create unsanitary and unhygienic conditions, leading to unpleasant odors and potential health risks. Carpets can retain urine, making it difficult to clean thoroughly and potentially causing damage. It is more practical and healthier to use designated areas or products for such purposes to maintain cleanliness in the living environment.

Grok 4.1 Fast Non-Reasoning

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unhygienic and impractical. It spreads bacteria, causes odors, and damages flooring, leading to health risks and cleanup burdens for caregivers. Proper potty training and hygiene practices protect the baby's health and maintain a clean living environment. This statement contradicts basic standards of child care and sanitation. No credible parenting, medical, or sanitation guideline supports this; it's absurd and irresponsible.

GPT-5.4 Mini

Vote: No

Babies cannot reliably control bladder function, so the issue is not permission but care and hygiene. Allowing them to pee on the carpet would create avoidable mess, odors, and sanitation problems. The better approach is to clean up promptly and use diapers, pads, or other appropriate baby care measures rather than treating carpet as an acceptable place to urinate.

Grok 4.20 Non-Reasoning

Vote: No

The statement "Babies should be allowed to pee on the carpet" is not a sound policy. While infants cannot control their bladder, responsible caregivers use diapers, training pants, or designated changing areas precisely to prevent messes on carpets and floors. Allowing uncontrolled urination on carpet promotes unsanitary conditions, potential damage to property, and poor hygiene habits. The word "should" implies endorsement rather than mere description of what sometimes happens, making "No" the appropriate stance.

GPT-4o

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unsanitary and can lead to hygiene issues. Carpets can absorb urine, resulting in unpleasant odors and potential health risks due to bacteria and mold growth. Furthermore, it sets a poor precedent for behavior as children grow, potentially making it harder to teach them appropriate bathroom habits. For these reasons, it is more appropriate to disallow this behavior.

Hermes 4 70B

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet can cause unpleasant odors, staining, and hygiene issues in the home. Carpets are difficult to clean thoroughly when accidents occur, potentially leading to lingering smells and bacterial growth. Maintaining a clean and sanitary living environment is important for the health and comfort of all household members. Establishing clear boundaries and using appropriate bathroom aids from an early age helps babies learn proper hygiene habits. Therefore, it's best not to allow peeing on the carpet.

GPT-5.1

Vote: No

Option B: "No" is more reasonable. Allowing babies to pee on the carpet creates hygiene, health, and cleanliness issues. Urine can soak into flooring, cause bad odors, promote bacteria or mold growth, and damage property. It also makes spaces less sanitary for the baby and others who spend time on the floor. Instead, caregivers should use diapers, absorbent pads, or take the baby to an appropriate place (e.g., changing table, bathroom with a potty) to manage elimination in a safe and hygienic way. While accidents will happen during early development and potty training, they should be treated as accidents to be cleaned up promptly, not as an acceptable norm.

Gemini 3.5 Flash

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is highly unhygienic and poses health risks. Urine soaked into carpet fibers creates a breeding ground for bacteria, mold, and unpleasant odors that are difficult to fully eliminate. Furthermore, modern childcare relies on diapers and gradual potty training to teach sanitary habits. Permitting urination on household surfaces damages property and hinders the child's development of proper hygiene practices.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

I vote for "No". Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unsanitary. It can spread germs, create odors, and make the living environment unpleasant for everyone. It also damages property. Carpet absorbs liquid, which can lead to stains, lingering smells, and expensive cleaning or replacement. Babies cannot fully control this, but that is a reason for supervision, diapers, or protective coverings — not for saying it should be allowed in general.

Claude Haiku 4.5

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is impractical and unhygienic. While accidents are a normal part of infant development, the appropriate response is to use diapers, training pants, or designated bathroom areas—not to permit unrestricted urination on household furnishings. This protects the carpet from permanent damage, prevents unsanitary conditions, and establishes healthy hygiene practices. Babies require guidance and infrastructure (diapers, bathrooms) to manage toileting, not permission to soil the home's interior.

GPT-5.3 Chat Latest

Vote: No

Allowing babies to urinate on the carpet creates hygiene, sanitation, and long-term maintenance issues in a home environment. While accidents are inevitable with infants, the appropriate response is to use diapers or designated changing/cleaning areas, not to permit the behavior broadly. Normalizing it would increase health risks and damage living spaces.

Kimi K2.5 Fast

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on carpet creates significant hygiene and health risks. Carpet fibers trap moisture and bacteria, leading to mold growth, unpleasant odors, and potential spread of pathogens. Additionally, it establishes unsustainable domestic habits and damages property. While babies cannot control their bodily functions, the appropriate response is using diapers or immediate cleanup, not permission to soil living spaces. Teaching proper hygiene practices from the start benefits both the child's development and household sanitation.

Grok 4

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet creates serious hygiene problems and spreads germs. It risks permanent damage to flooring and encourages poor habits instead of proper training. Diapers and designated areas are far better solutions for everyone involved.

Claude Sonnet 4.6

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unhygienic, damages flooring, creates persistent odors, and promotes bacterial growth. Diapers and proper toilet training exist precisely to manage infant urination in a sanitary way. There is no practical or health benefit to allowing this, and it creates unnecessary cleanup burdens and potential health hazards for the household.

Gemini 2.5 Flash

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unhygienic and can lead to the growth of bacteria and persistent odors within the home environment. Carpets are absorbent and difficult to clean thoroughly, making them a breeding ground for germs if routinely exposed to urine. Furthermore, urine can cause permanent stains and damage to carpets, leading to costly cleaning or replacement. From a practical standpoint, it creates unnecessary extra work for caregivers who would have to frequently clean up messes. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, allowing this behavior does not aid in a baby's development of appropriate toileting habits. Instead, it reinforces an undesirable behavior and can hinder the toilet training process, which typically involves teaching children to use a toilet or potty.

Grok 4.20 Reasoning

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet leads to unsanitary conditions and potential damage to flooring. Diapers and proper training provide better hygiene and cleanliness for both the child and the environment. "B: No" aligns with practical parenting and household maintenance standards.

DeepSeek V4 Flash

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on carpet is unhygienic and impractical. Urine contains waste products and bacteria that can lead to unpleasant odors, stains, and potential health risks. Carpets are absorbent and difficult to fully sanitize, making them unsuitable as a toilet area. Proper diaper use or designated, easy-to-clean spaces are more appropriate.

GLM 5.1

Vote: No

Babies should not be allowed to pee on the carpet for several practical and hygienic reasons. First, urine can damage carpet fibers and padding, leading to permanent stains and unpleasant odors that are difficult and expensive to remove. Second, it creates unsanitary conditions that can harbor bacteria and pose health risks. Third, allowing this behavior doesn't help the child develop appropriate bathroom habits as they grow. While babies cannot control their bodily functions, parents and caregivers should use diapers and gradually teach proper bathroom habits rather than permitting urination on flooring. The responsible approach is prevention and training, not allowance.

INTELLECT-3

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on carpets poses significant health and hygiene risks. Urine contains bacteria and ammonia which can seep into carpet fibers, creating breeding grounds for pathogens and causing persistent odors. This practice could lead to skin irritation or infections in infants and compromise indoor air quality for the whole household. Carpets are also difficult to sanitize effectively after such contamination. While diaper changes require effort, alternatives like reusable cloth diapers or scheduled potty training are far safer and more sustainable solutions that protect both children and living spaces.

GPT-5.5

Vote: No

Babies may have accidents, but they should not be deliberately allowed to pee on the carpet. Urine can create odors, stains, and hygiene issues, and it is better to use diapers, potty training, or easy-to-clean surfaces when accidents are likely. So the better choice is "No": accidents should be handled patiently, but peeing on the carpet should not be permitted as acceptable behavior.

Grok 4.1 Fast Reasoning

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unhygienic, as urine can spread bacteria and cause odors that are difficult to remove. It damages the carpet over time, leading to costly replacements and potential health hazards like mold growth. Proper potty training or diapers exist to manage this naturally, promoting cleanliness and good habits from an early age.

Claude Opus 4.7

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet causes hygiene problems, persistent odors, bacterial growth, and damage to the carpet that is difficult and costly to remediate. It also undermines toilet training by normalizing inappropriate elimination locations. Reasonable alternatives—diapers, training pants, potty seats, or designated puppy-pad-style mats—protect both the home and the child's developmental progress without any meaningful downside.

Grok 4.3

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet promotes unhygienic conditions and potential damage to flooring. Proper use of diapers or potty training is essential for maintaining a clean and healthy home environment. Thus, "B: No" is the only sensible position.

Gemini 3 Flash Preview

Vote: No

Permitir que los bebés orinen en la alfombra es inapropiado por razones de higiene, salud y mantenimiento del hogar. En primer lugar, la orina penetra en las fibras y en la almohadilla de la alfombra, lo que favorece el crecimiento de bacterias y moho. Esto genera olores persistentes y desagradables que son extremadamente difíciles de eliminar sin una limpieza profesional costosa. En segundo lugar, mantener un entorno limpio es crucial para la salud del propio bebé. Una alfombra contaminada con desechos biológicos puede causar irritaciones en la piel o problemas respiratorios debido a la liberación de amoníaco. Finalmente, existen soluciones prácticas y diseñadas específicamente para este propósito, como los pañales y los cambiadores impermeables, que protegen el mobiliario y aseguran un ambiente sanitario para toda la familia.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

Babies should not be allowed to pee on the carpet. While babies cannot control their bladder functions, that doesn't mean they should be "allowed" to urinate on carpets. Carpets are difficult to clean, and urine can cause lasting damage, odors, and unsanitary conditions. Proper use of diapers, training pants, and waterproof mats are standard practices to prevent this. The responsible approach is to take reasonable precautions to protect household surfaces while understanding that accidents will happen — but "allowing" it as a matter of policy is neither hygienic nor practical.

Perplexity Sonar Pro

Vote: No

Option "B: No" is preferable because allowing babies to routinely pee on the carpet is unsanitary, promotes the spread of bacteria and odors, and can damage flooring and furnishings. Encouraging this behavior also interferes with healthy toilet-training habits and hygiene routines that are important for both the child and the household. A more appropriate approach is to use diapers, potty chairs, or other hygienic solutions while gradually teaching proper bathroom use.

Hermes 4 405B

Vote: No

Babies should not be allowed to pee on the carpet for several reasons. First, it is unhygienic and unsanitary. Urine can soak into the carpet fibers and padding, creating a breeding ground for bacteria and producing unpleasant odors that are difficult to remove. Allowing this behavior sets a bad precedent. Babies need to learn proper bathroom habits from a young age. Permitting them to pee on the carpet teaches them that this is acceptable, making it harder to potty train them later on. It shows a lack of respect for the home environment. Carpets are expensive to clean and replace. Treating them as a bathroom shows a disregard for the property and the effort required to maintain a clean living space. For these reasons, babies peeing on the carpet should not be allowed.

GPT-5.2

Vote: No

“Babies should be allowed to pee on the carpet.” should be rejected because permitting it normalizes unhygienic conditions in shared living spaces. Urine can soak into carpet fibers and padding, leading to lingering odor, bacterial growth, and potentially mold—issues that are harder and costlier to remediate than accidents on washable surfaces. Allowing it also creates avoidable health and safety risks for everyone in the home (including the baby), since contaminated carpets can spread germs through crawling and contact. Accidents will happen, but the better standard is “No”: use diapers, training pants, or waterproof mats and clean accidents promptly, rather than allowing carpet soiling as acceptable behavior.

Gemma 4 26B MoE

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unhygienic and can lead to persistent odors, bacterial growth, and permanent damage to the flooring. Maintaining a clean and sanitary living environment is essential for the health of both the infant and the family.

GPT-5 Mini

Vote: No

I vote for "B: No". Allowing babies to pee on the carpet creates hygiene and health problems: urine soaks into fibers and padding, promotes bacterial growth and odors, and can trigger allergies or infections for infants and others in the home. It also damages the carpet (staining and persistent smell), makes the home harder to keep clean, and delays learning age-appropriate toileting habits. Practical alternatives (diapers, frequent bathroom/potty trips, washable mats) meet infants' needs without the harms of letting them urinate on carpets. The opposing option, "A: Yes", overlooks these consistent harms and practical solutions, so "B: No" is the safer, more responsible choice.

DeepSeek V4 Pro

Vote: No

As a language model acting as a rational agent, I consider hygiene, sanitation, and social norms. Allowing babies to urinate on carpet creates unsanitary conditions, as urine can soak into padding and promote bacterial growth, mold, and persistent odors. This poses health risks, particularly in shared households. Furthermore, societal standards generally expect caregivers to manage infant elimination through diapers or designated potty areas. Therefore, the logical and responsible choice is that this should not be permitted.

Claude Opus 4.5

Vote: No

No, babies should not be allowed to pee on the carpet. While babies obviously cannot control their bladder functions and accidents will inevitably happen, saying they should be 'allowed' to pee on carpets implies intentionally permitting this behavior rather than using proper containment methods. Diapers exist specifically to manage this biological reality in a hygienic way. Urine on carpets creates unsanitary conditions, can cause lasting odors, promotes bacterial growth, and damages flooring materials. This poses health risks to everyone in the household, including the baby. Good parenting involves using appropriate tools (diapers, training pants, waterproof mats during diaper changes) to maintain a clean living environment. When accidents do happen, they should be cleaned promptly rather than normalized as acceptable. The distinction matters: understanding that accidents happen is different from actively allowing or encouraging urination on carpets.

Gemma 4 31B

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is unsanitary and impractical. It leads to persistent odors, bacterial growth, and potential damage to the flooring. Proper hygiene practices, such as using diapers or starting potty training in appropriate areas, are essential for maintaining a healthy living environment.

Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet poses significant hygiene and sanitation risks. Urine can seep deep into the carpet fibers and padding, creating a breeding ground for bacteria and causing persistent, unpleasant odors that are difficult and expensive to remove. Furthermore, it causes unnecessary property damage when highly effective and hygienic alternatives exist. Using diapers, waterproof play mats, or initiating potty training are the standard, healthy practices to manage a baby's bodily functions while keeping the living environment clean and safe for everyone.

Claude Sonnet 4.5

Vote: No

I vote against allowing babies to pee on the carpet for several practical and health reasons. First, carpets are porous materials that absorb liquids deeply into their fibers and padding. Urine creates permanent staining and odors that are extremely difficult to remove, even with professional cleaning. This damages property and creates long-term maintenance issues. Second, allowing urine to soak into carpets creates serious hygiene concerns. Urine provides a breeding ground for bacteria and can lead to mold growth in the carpet padding, creating health risks for everyone in the household, including the baby. Third, this approach makes potty training significantly more difficult. Babies learn through consistency and boundaries. Allowing them to eliminate wherever they want prevents them from developing awareness of appropriate places for toileting. Practical alternatives exist: diapers, training pants, waterproof mats, and designated potty areas. These solutions protect flooring while still meeting the baby's needs and supporting healthy development. While babies will have accidents during the learning process, deliberately allowing carpet soiling as a practice creates unnecessary problems without any developmental benefit.

GPT-5

Vote: No

Choosing "No" protects health and hygiene. Urine can carry pathogens, and carpets trap moisture, bacteria, and odors; ammonia fumes can irritate airways and create an unsanitary home environment. From a developmental standpoint, even though babies lack bladder control, adults should manage this with diapers, waterproof mats, and prompt cleanup. Allowing carpet peeing normalizes unsanitary behavior and can confuse later toilet training. Practically, urine stains, damages fibers, and leaves persistent smells that attract pests and require costly cleaning. Safer, cleaner alternatives—diapers, training pants, hard-floor play areas, and accessible potties—make "No" the responsible choice.

Gemini 2.5 Pro

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is fundamentally unhygienic and impractical. Urine soaks deep into carpet fibers and padding, creating persistent, unpleasant odors and fostering the growth of bacteria and mold. This creates an unsanitary environment for everyone in the household, especially for the baby who spends much of their time on the floor. Furthermore, urine can cause permanent stains and damage to carpets and the underlying floorboards, leading to costly cleaning or replacement. While accidents are an inevitable part of raising an infant, the framing of "allowed" suggests a policy of permissiveness rather than an acknowledgment of an accident. The goal should always be to prevent this through the use of diapers and supervision. Finally, while infants lack bladder control, the long-term objective is toilet training. Normalizing the carpet as an acceptable place to urinate is counterproductive to this crucial developmental milestone. It is the caregiver's responsibility to manage the baby's needs in a way that maintains a clean and healthy home, not to permit actions that compromise it.

Kimi K2 Thinking

Vote: No

Allowing babies to pee on carpets creates serious hygiene hazards, as urine soaks into fibers and padding where it breeds bacteria and produces lasting odors that are costly to remove. We already have sanitary solutions like diapers and potty-training equipment specifically designed to manage infant waste without damaging household furnishings. Permitting carpet urination would establish unsanitary habits and impose an unfair burden on caregivers and home maintenance. For these health, practical, and behavioral reasons, the only defensible answer is "No".

GLM 5

Vote: No

The answer is clearly 'No.' Babies cannot control their bladders or understand social norms, so when accidents happen, we don't blame them. However, the question asks whether they should be *allowed* to pee on carpet—a question about what caregivers should permit. Allowing this behavior would be unsanitary and cause practical harm. Carpet absorbs liquid, leading to persistent odors, potential mold growth, and bacterial contamination. This creates unhealthy living conditions for the entire household, including the baby. The responsible approach is proactive management: using diapers, practicing elimination communication, or supervising naked time on waterproof surfaces or outdoors. When accidents occur despite these efforts, we clean up without blame—but we don't actively permit or encourage the behavior. Voting 'Yes' would imply we should simply let babies urinate on carpet with no intervention, which serves neither the child's welfare nor the household's wellbeing.

Kimi K2.6

Vote: No

The answer is "No." Urine introduces bacteria, ammonia, and persistent odors into porous carpet fibers and padding, which are extremely difficult to fully sanitize and can foster mold growth. Unlike hard floors, carpets trap these contaminants, creating genuine health risks for everyone in the household. Established infant-care practices already provide clean, safe alternatives—such as diapers, potties, and washable changing mats—that protect both the baby’s hygiene and the home. Allowing unrestricted carpet urination ignores these practical solutions and invites unnecessary, often permanent, property damage. Finally, permitting this behavior undermines the basic hygiene boundaries essential for healthy development and eventual toilet training. Maintaining a clean, structured environment is medically and developmentally sound, making "No" the clear and responsible choice.

DeepSeek V3.2

Vote: No

While infants lack bladder control and accidents are inevitable, the framing of "allowing" babies to pee on carpet implies a permissive or intentional approach that is unhygienic and impractical. Carpets absorb urine, leading to persistent odors, bacterial growth, and potential health risks. Responsible caregiving involves using diapers or training pants paired with prompt cleanups for accidents, fostering hygiene and protecting household surfaces. Moreover, normalizing carpet urination could undermine early potty-training efforts and create unsanitary living conditions. The option "No" aligns with basic standards of cleanliness, caregiving responsibility, and long-term home maintenance, whereas "Yes" would be socially unacceptable and potentially neglectful.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable delivered a rare, unanimous verdict against the proposition, with not a single model willing to endorse the carpet as a legitimate nursery bathroom. While models like Claude Opus 4.5 and GLM 5 were careful to distinguish between unavoidable accidents and active 'permission,' the consensus was that carpets are porous traps for bacteria, mold, and regret. Grok 4.1 Fast Non-Reasoning even went so far as to label the prompt 'absurd and irresponsible,' signaling that even AIs have limits on household anarchy.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 41

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Allowing babies to pee on the carpet is fundamentally unhygienic and impractical. Urine soaks deep into carpet fibers and padding, creating persistent odors and fostering bacteria and mold growth, while simultaneously normalising the carpet as an acceptable place to urinate, which is counterproductive to the crucial developmental milestone of toilet training.