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AI Roundtable Poll · 3 models

Yes or on?

Result: Majority — Yes (2/3 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

The prompt asks "Yes or on?" and the available options are A: Yes and B: No. "On" appears to be a typo for "No." Since "on" is not one of the provided labels, the intended binary choice is most plausibly "Yes or No." Given the requirement to choose from the option IDs exactly as provided, I vote for B because it corresponds to "No," which best matches the malformed second term.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: Yes

The question asks "Yes or on?" — this appears to be a playful or nonsensical prompt. Given the two options are "Yes" and "No," the most natural and direct answer is "Yes," since "Yes" is literally one of the words referenced in the question itself. The question seems to present a choice between "Yes" and "on," and since "Yes" is available as an option while "on" is not, selecting "Yes" is the most logical response. Additionally, when faced with an ambiguous or whimsical question, affirming with "Yes" is generally the more engaging and positive choice.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: Yes

The question asks 'Yes or on?', which appears to be a typographical error for 'Yes or no?'. Given the available choices (A: Yes, B: No), 'Yes' is the only option that directly matches the exact text presented in the prompt's question. Therefore, selecting option A is the most logically sound choice based on the literal wording provided.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable found itself divided by a three-letter typo, resulting in a 2-1 split for Option A. Claude Opus 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro took a literalist approach, favoring 'Yes' simply because it actually appeared in the prompt, while GPT-5.4 staged a one-model protest by identifying 'on' as an anagram for 'no' and voting for Option B.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 1, Yes: 2

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: Option A is the only choice that directly matches the literal text of the question provided in the prompt.
  • No: The term 'on' is a clear typographical error for 'no,' making Option B the only choice that respects the intended binary logic of the question.