At a time when AI backlash and data center protests are making headlines, Anthropic’s Claude is announcing 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 broader AI. On the surface, this is an analytics feature that provides insight into what kinds of topics people discuss, their overall usage patterns, and what kinds of tasks they tend to ask AI for help with.
But Reflect’s larger purpose is to shape the way users think about AI itself. We do this by viewing Claude as a highly leveraged productivity tool, a technology that is part of your daily workflow and should be used with care.

Claude Reflect doesn’t go so far as to quantify the time it takes to do manual tasks by switching your workflow to AI, but when you see all the tasks Claude has helped you with lined up in front of you, you’re likely to see Claude as a reliable tool and part of your daily life.
Anthropic, on the other hand, challenges us to think critically about how we use AI. Reflect occasionally asks questions like, “What would you continue to do for yourself even if Claude could have done it sooner?”
The app also provides tools to set quiet time and schedule nudges to take a break from the AI. Anthropic said in the announcement: This is a nod to the potentially addictive nature of working with AI chatbots, which always respond to questions and encourage follow-ups to continue the conversation.

The idea of adding analytics to apps to subtly shape consumer psychology is not new.
In 2012, Google promoted a new utility called Gmail Meter. It calculates email inbox numbers and displays traffic patterns, pie charts for email categories, the amount of data in your inbox and archives, and more. Poring over this kind of data is fun for some techies, but the meter also served as a numerical and graphical way to show how central Gmail has become to people’s digital lives.
Claude’s Reflect does something similar, but goes a step further by training users on how to use AI more effectively.

For example, Reflect may suggest that you can use Claude’s project functionality instead of re-contextualizing your work across repeated tasks. For Anthropic, this also has the benefit of allowing deeper integration into their daily workflows with Claude, helping to retain users and deter them from switching to competitors’ AI tools.
Anthropic points out that more sensitive conversations may appear in Claude Reflect, but only at a high level, and conversations related to health integration tools are completely excluded from insights. None of the data in Insights will be used for any other purpose, the company said.
This Claude Reflect feature is available in beta for Free, Pro, and Max users with memory turned on. Later it will be expanded to include a view of time spent using Claude.
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