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Anthropic’s new Claude feature is quietly selling you on AI

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At a time when AI backlash and data center protests are making headlines, Anthropic’s Claude is rolling out a new feature that subtly makes the case for why you should keep using it.

On Thursday, the company introduced “Reflect,” a built-in dashboard that lets you track and visualize how you use Claude and your broader AI habits. On the surface, it’s an analytics feature that offers insights into what sort of topics you’ve discussed, your overall usage patterns, and what kinds of tasks you tend to turn to AI for help with.

But Reflect’s larger purpose is about shaping how users think about AI itself. It does so by framing Claude as both a highly-utilized productivity tool and a part of your everyday workflow, as well as a technology that can be used mindfully.

Image Credits:Anthropic

While Claude Reflect doesn’t go so far as to quantify how much time you’ve saved on manual tasks by switching your workflows to AI, there’s something about having all the work Claude helped with laid out in front of you that will likely make you see Claude as a tool you’ve come to rely on, and one very much a part of your everyday life.

Meanwhile, Anthropic will push you to think critically about your AI usage, as Reflect will pop up questions from time to time, like “What’s one thing you want to keep doing yourself, even if Claude could do it faster?”

The app additionally offers tools to set quiet hours or schedule nudges to take a break from AI, Anthropic notes in its announcement — a nod to the potentially addictive nature of working with AI chatbots, which never fail to respond to your questions and prompt follow-ups to keep the conversation going.

Image Credits:Anthropic

The idea to add analytics to an app to subtly shape consumer sentiment is not a new one.

In 2012, Google promoted a new utility called Gmail Meter, which number-crunched your email inbox, showing you traffic patterns, pie charts of email categories, how much data is in your inbox versus your archive, among other things. While navel-gazing over this type of data is fun for some technical folks, the meter also served as a way to display, in numbers and charts, how Gmail had become central to people’s digital lives.

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