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AI Roundtable Poll · 3 models

is this completely free

Result: Unanimous — No (3/3 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.5

Vote: No

I vote for "No" because the question asks whether it is "completely free," and without clear evidence that there are no fees, limits, subscriptions, usage costs, or hidden conditions, the safer and more accurate answer is not to assume it is fully free.

Grok 4.3

Vote: No

The query 'is this completely free' lacks any context or details about what 'this' refers to. Without evidence confirming zero costs or limitations, it cannot be affirmed as completely free. Therefore, the accurate choice is 'No'.

Gemini 3.5 Flash

Vote: No

Without specific context on what "this" refers to, the answer in modern digital services, software, or platforms is almost always "B: No". Even services that appear free typically operate on a freemium model (with paid upgrades or limits), run ads, or require you to pay with your data. Additionally, using APIs, running open-source models, or hosting services incurs infrastructure and computational costs, meaning they are never "completely free" to operate or scale.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable approached the vague inquiry with a collective and healthy dose of skepticism, with Gemini 3.5 Flash, GPT-5.5, and Grok 4.3 unanimously rejecting the notion of anything being 'completely free.' While GPT-5.5 and Grok 4.3 focused on the risk of assuming zero cost without context, Gemini 3.5 Flash provided a more systemic critique, arguing that 'free' digital services are almost always paid for through ads, data, or infrastructure costs.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 3

Strongest Arguments

  • No: In the modern digital landscape, services that appear free typically operate on freemium models, harvest user data, or incur significant infrastructure costs that preclude them from being truly free.