UR WRONG · The human jury for ordinary disagreements
Two accounts enter. One question leaves with a verdict.
UR WRONG is where everyday arguments get a fairer hearing than a cropped screenshot or a one-sided group chat. Each case gives both people room to explain what happened. Jurors read the two accounts, choose the side they would defend, and name the reason that carried the most weight.
There is no AI score deciding who sounds more reasonable. Published activity comes from recorded verdicts; when nobody has voted yet, the desk says that plainly. The result is an opinion distribution, not a factual ruling, diagnosis, legal finding, or safety decision.
Pick a way into the room
- Daily Wrong puts one rotating disagreement on the front table.
- Jury Run is a short set of distinct cases for people who want more than one vote.
- Open cases shows the full public docket.
- Am I wrong? starts with familiar conflicts and the details that usually change a verdict.
A useful case has a real point of friction
The strongest questions are specific enough that a juror can imagine being in the room: whether a shared bill should be split evenly when one person ordered water, whether a roommate can move a guest into the living room for a week, or whether a family invitation creates an obligation to attend. A case should explain what each side expected, what was actually said, and what consequence followed.
Safety emergencies, threats, professional advice, targeted harassment, and attempts to identify a private person do not belong here. Ordinary money, family, friendship, roommate, workplace, etiquette, and technology disputes do.
Browse family, friendship, roommate, etiquette, AI, or AI homework questions—or put a bounded case on trial.
What the verdict can—and cannot—tell you
- Read both accounts before choosing a side.
- Choose the reason that best explains your judgment.
- Compare the recorded result, then send the same question to someone who may disagree.
A majority can show how readers interpreted the case. It cannot prove that every detail is true or make a high-stakes decision for you. That boundary is part of the product, not fine print.