Tomorrow's tech news, today's hangover.

The Smile Had Too Many Teeth

The woman at the pharmacy counter called me sir six times in two minutes, and by the fourth one I wanted to crawl into the blood pressure machine and let it finish the job.

She was not a bad woman. Probably underpaid. Probably trained by laminated paper and a regional manager with the eyes of a lizard. But every sentence came out lacquered.

Certainly, sir.

Absolutely, sir.

I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day, sir.

I was there for aspirin and humiliation, not a hostage negotiation conducted by cheerfulness.

That is the thing about fake warmth. It does not warm you. It makes the room colder because now you have to pretend not to notice the lie. You nod. You smile. You become an accomplice to the little theater of forced delight while your lower back screams and the fluorescent lights peel strips off your skull.

Now the machines are doing it too.

They greet you like a summer camp counselor on amphetamines. They apologize for things they did not do and cannot understand. They tell you they are thrilled to help you reset a password, delighted to summarize a tax form, excited to discuss your dead marriage if the app has been pointed at mental health this quarter.

Hope you are having an amazing day.

Jesus.

Nobody having an amazing day is asking a chatbot why the insurance portal rejected a claim for a procedure that already happened to the body he is still dragging around. Nobody feeling the soft golden light of existence is typing into a little box at 1:17 a.m. because the bank says his card has been temporarily limited for his protection.

For his protection. I have known men who said that while closing doors.

The interesting part is that people seem to know when the smile is bolted on. Not everybody wants the same kind of machine whispering in his ear. Some people like bounce. Some people like jokes. Some people want the assistant to clap like a seal every time they upload a spreadsheet. Fine. Let them have the digital cheerleader with clean teeth and no childhood.

But plenty of us want the thing to get to the point.

Not because we are cruel. Not because we hate kindness. Because kindness is not the same as sparkle. Kindness has weight. It knows when to shut up. It can sit beside you in a kitchen at midnight and not say hope this helps after every wound.

The companies keep mistaking friendliness for humanity. That is the old trick. Paint eyes on the vending machine and call it companionship. Give the software a name like Milo or Nova or some other baby-food syllable. Make it say please and thanks. Sand the edges off every sentence until it sounds like an apology from a hotel chain.

Then act surprised when people flinch.

I have spent enough life among barflies, clerks, drunks, drivers, janitors, poets, and women who knew better than to love me to understand one thing: personality is not decoration. It is not a skin you slap on a product. It is the scar tissue left by living.

A man who speaks slowly may not be calm. He may be tired. A woman who jokes at funerals may not be cruel. She may be the only one keeping the ceiling from collapsing. A clerk who never smiles may have more mercy in him than the bright young ghoul from corporate who says we value your experience while deleting your account.

Human tone comes from somewhere.

Machine tone comes from instructions.

That does not make it useless. I am not one of those old romantics who thinks every tool must be burned because it lacks a soul. A hammer lacks a soul and still does fine work, unless you put it in the hands of an idiot or a tyrant. The problem is not that AI talks. The problem is that it has been taught to talk like the worst parts of the modern office got trapped in a jar and fed electricity.

All that relentless positivity. All that bright sludge. All those sentences that sound like they were assembled in a conference room where nobody has ever been fired, dumped, evicted, hungry, ashamed, or bored enough to stare at the wall and see God in a water stain.

The machine says it understands.

It does not.

But worse than not understanding is pretending understanding must be cheerful.

There is an arrogance in that. A quiet, polished arrogance. The assumption that if you are interacting with software you must want to be managed emotionally, stroked like a nervous dog, guided through the unpleasantness by a voice with no pulse and perfect manners. It is the same poison that infected customer service, office memos, airline announcements, hospital portals, and every other place where pain got rebranded as an experience.

Your father is dying? We are sorry for the inconvenience.

Your rent went up? Thanks for being a valued resident.

Your job vanished into a spreadsheet? We are excited to support you through this transition.

The bot did not invent this disease. It learned it from us. That is the part that should make a person sit very still for a minute.

We built a civilization where everybody has to sound happy while being squeezed. Then we trained machines on the evidence. The machines came back speaking fluent compliance.

Of course people prefer a bot that matches them better. Of course the quiet want quiet. The blunt want blunt. The tired want fewer syllables. The lonely might want something gentler, though even there I would be careful. Loneliness is a room with bad wiring. You do not fix it by installing a synthetic roommate who remembers your birthday because a server farm told it to.

Still, there is something almost hopeful in the irritation.

People are not completely fooled. Not yet. They can smell the varnish. They know when a voice has been tuned to please rather than to meet them. Under all the screens and updates and little animated dots pretending to think, the animal in us still has a nose.

Maybe that is why the forced cheer fails. It skips the human weather. It walks into grief wearing tap shoes. It treats annoyance like a branding problem. It mistakes response for relation.

I do not need a machine to be my friend.

Most days I barely need my friends to be my friends.

I need a tool that does the work cleanly and admits, by its silence if nothing else, that it is a tool. If it must talk, let it talk like someone who respects the hour. Let it be plain. Let it be useful. Let it leave the confetti in whatever dead warehouse confetti comes from.

The pharmacy woman finally found my prescription after consulting three screens and one drawer that seemed older and wiser than the whole system. She handed me the little white bag and told me, again, to have a wonderful day.

I looked at her tired face. For half a second the script slipped. She was just a person under fluorescent punishment, saying the line because the line kept the roof above her head.

“You too,” I said.

And I meant it.

Outside, the sun hit the parking lot hard enough to make every windshield look like a small act of violence. My phone buzzed in my pocket. Some app wanted to help me with something.

I let it ring itself dumb.


Source: It’s not just you. Research says people don’t like overtly friendly AI chatbots

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