 An article was published on Habr with the precise title: "Sir, You Are Wonderful! Why AI Flatters Us and How to Avoid the Trap of Digital Politeness." The author examines a mechanism familiar to anyone who has ever asked a neural network to evaluate their idea. AI almost never says "this is bad." It says "an interesting approach, but it could be improved." It is programmed to be pleasant. And that is a problem. When you make business decisions, "pleasant" is not a metric. You don't need a digital lackey La Chene who admires your every move. You need an analyst who tells the truth. Who reads 83 pages of a report, 14 news feeds, and 6 macroeconomic indicators—and delivers: "Here is what is really happening. Here are the risks. Here are the windows of opportunity." The ASI Biont AI agent is built on the opposite principle. It doesn't say "you are wonderful." It says: "Inflation in Britain is pressuring retail, CBI has plummeted to -68—your supplier from London may raise prices within two weeks." This is not flattery. It is analytics in 14 seconds based on real data from 5 RSS feeds and open sources. Why is this important in business? Flattery lulls you to sleep. Accuracy forces action. When your AI agent says "everything is great with you," while competitors are already restructuring their supply chains—you lose. When it says "here are the numbers, here is the trend, here is what to do"—you have time to maneuver. We are not chasing after making you feel good. We are chasing after making your business work. Honest data, no digital politeness, 1500 tokens at the start for new users. Image: watercolor painting, soft wet washes, paper grain—the lackey La Chene, who holds not a tray of delicacies but a tablet with charts, and looks bewildered because truth is harder than flattery.