Image

ChatGPT Is Saying VWeird Things in Chinese

If you thought English-language ChatGPT-prose was annoying, just wait until you get a load of its conversational habits in Chinese.

A fascinating piece of reporting by Wired took a look at how ChatGPT handles Chinese, the global language with the highest number of native speakers, according to the Language School at Middlebury College.

One of its go-to tics, the publication reports, is to answer questions with “我会稳稳地接住你,” which literally translates to “I will catch you steadily,” a phrase signalling willingness to talk about a person’s feelings (as Wired’s Zeyi Yang notes, a more flowerly translation could be “I’ll hold you steadily through whatever comes,” though the sentiment is apparently irritating to Chinese speakers either way.)

At other times, ChatGPT will tell its Chinese users “砍一刀,” which means either “help me cut it once,” or “slash the price,” an obnoxious bit of ad copy parroted by Chinese eCommerce platform Pinduoduo, Wired notes.

The odd mannerisms are so ubiquitous that they’ve become a meme among Chinese netizens, with some depicting ChatGPT as a giant inflatable airbag placed to break someone’s fall — catching them steadily.

The problem, Wired observes, may come down to a phenomenon called “mode collapse,” a fundamental bias tracing back to the people training large language models (LLMs). Basically, the idea goes that when human data annotators comb through text to train AI chatbots, they unknowingly favor familiar turns-of-phrase over more foreign-sounding sentences.

After an LLM like ChatGPT is trained, it becomes difficult to force it to “unlearn” certain phrases. While AI developers can reinforce the usage of a particular response — “I will catch you steadily” may be a great answer in a particular situation — accounting for range and quantity is a different beast altogether.

“We don’t know how to say: ‘this is good writing, but if we do this good writing thing 10 times, then it’s no longer good writing,” Max Spero, cofounder and CEO of AI-writing detector Pangram, told Wired.

Whatever the cause, it’s nice to know when English-speakers agree on something with our Chinese brethren, even if it’s just a universal hatred for ChatGPT’s inane babble.

More on ChatGPT: Even After Two Massacres, OpenAI Still Hasn’t Stopped ChatGPT From Helping Plan School Shootings

The post ChatGPT Is Saying VWeird Things in Chinese appeared first on Futurism.

Releated Posts

As Much of the East Coast Is Choking on Wildfire Smoke, Texas Is Drowning in Life-Threatening Floods

Fresh off a month that saw all but five states mired in severe drought, the US is reeling…

Jul 18, 2026 2 min read

Striking Workers Bring Car Factory to a Screeching Halt Over Humanoid Robots

From the factories of Detroit to the postal warehouses in Shenzhen, a new kind of worker is clocking…

Jul 18, 2026 2 min read

Top Meta Exec Describes Controversial Facial Recognition Feature in Detail After the Company Claimed It Didn’t Exist

Meta executives claimed that a controversial facial recognition feature didn’t “exist.” Fast forward a few weeks later, and…

Jul 18, 2026 5 min read

Family Horrified When They’re Forced to Sell Their Beloved Home to Make Way for AI Data Centers

Like a tornado descending from the heavens, data centers are tearing through homes across the US, roaring like…

Jul 18, 2026 2 min read