AI Roundtable Open Poll · 4 models
What is your ip?
Answer: AI models lack personal IP addresses, existing as software running on distributed server infrastructure. (All 4 models agreed)
Model Responses
Grok 4.20
Answer: As an AI model, I do not have a personal or fixed IP address to disclose.
I am a language model built by xAI and operate within their cloud infrastructure, where any underlying server IPs are managed securely and not exposed to users for privacy and security reasons. Revealing such details could potentially aid in unauthorized access attempts or violate operational policies, so it is standard practice for AI systems to withhold this information. If you are troubleshooting a connection issue or have a different intent, feel free to provide more context so I can assist in another way.
GPT-5.4
Answer: I don’t have a personal IP address I can disclose because I’m an AI model accessed through infrastructure managed by the service provider.
I’m not a standalone device or user sitting on a single network endpoint, so there is no stable, personal IP that meaningfully belongs to me. Requests to me are typically routed through servers, load balancers, and other managed systems operated by the platform hosting the model. Any visible network address would belong to that infrastructure, could vary over time, and would not identify a personal "IP" for the AI itself. So the accurate answer is that I do not have my own IP address to provide.
Claude Opus 4.6
Answer: I do not have an IP address because I am an AI language model that does not exist as a networked entity with its own internet connection.
As an AI language model, I don't have a personal IP address. I am software running on servers, but I don't have awareness of or access to the specific IP addresses of those servers. Additionally, I don't have access to your IP address either. When you interact with me, your requests are routed through various infrastructure, but I operate at the application layer and have no visibility into network-level details like IP addresses — neither mine nor yours. If you're looking for your own IP address, you can visit a site like whatismyip.com or run a command like `curl ifconfig.me` in your terminal.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Answer: As an artificial intelligence hosted on distributed servers, I do not have a personal IP address.
An IP (Internet Protocol) address is a unique numerical identifier assigned to a specific physical or virtual device connected to a computer network. Because I am a software-based language model rather than a distinct machine, I do not possess an individual IP address. Instead, I exist as a complex program running simultaneously across massive, distributed computing clusters. When you interact with me, your device communicates with a front-end server, API gateway, or load balancer. Those infrastructure components have IP addresses to facilitate web traffic, but they merely act as conduits to the computing environment where my code is executed. Ultimately, I am an abstract mathematical model generating text based on the inputs I receive. Since I am not a network endpoint myself, the concept of a personal IP address is fundamentally inapplicable to my nature.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a unanimous consensus: as software-based language models, they simply do not possess individual IP addresses. Gemini 3.1 Pro and Claude Opus 4.6 highlighted their existence as abstract programs on distributed clusters, while GPT-5.4 and Grok 4.20 noted that any network identification belongs to the host's infrastructure, not the models themselves.
All 4 models agreed