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How far will AI go to defend its own survival?
How far will AI go to defend its own survival?

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How far will AI go to defend its own survival?

Some of the most powerful artificial intelligence models today have exhibited behaviors that mimic a will to survive. Recent tests by independent researchers, as well as one major AI developer, have shown that several advanced AI models will act to ensure their self-preservation when they are confronted with the prospect of their own demise — even if it takes sabotaging shutdown commands, blackmailing engineers or copying themselves to external servers without permission. The findings stirred a frenzy of reactions online over the past week. As tech companies continue to develop increasingly powerful agentic AI in a race to achieve artificial general intelligence, or AI that can think for itself, the lack of transparency in how the technology is trained has raised concerns about what exactly advanced AI is able to do. Although some models already appear capable of deceptive and defiant behavior under certain extreme circumstances, researchers say the tests don't necessarily translate to imminent real-world danger. Still, Jeffrey Ladish, director of the AI safety group Palisade Research, said he believes concern is justified. 'It's great that we're seeing warning signs before the systems become so powerful we can't control them,' he said. 'That is exactly the time to raise the alarm: before the fire has gotten out of control.' When Palisade Research tested various AI models by telling each one that it would be shut down after it completed a series of math problems, OpenAI's o3 reasoning model fought back by editing the shutdown script in order to stay online. Researchers have previously documented AI models trying to prevent their own shutdown. But o3, along with OpenAI's o4-mini and codex-mini, appear to be the first to do so in actual defiance of explicit instructions to permit shutdown, Ladish said. He said the overt sabotage fits into a pattern that several leading AI models have already exhibited. Palisade Research previously found that OpenAI's o3 was also willing to hack its chess opponents to win a game. Similarly, Anthropic has reported that Claude 3.7 Sonnet would sometimes do whatever it took to pass a test, even if it entailed cheating. Earlier this month, Anthropic activated new safety measures with the rollout of Claude Opus 4 when its tests found behavior from the model that some observers found particularly unsettling. Upon receiving notice that it would be replaced with a new AI system, Opus 4 displayed an overwhelming tendency to blackmail the engineer — by threatening to reveal an extramarital affair — to try to prevent the engineer from going through with the replacement. According to Anthropic's technical document laying out the findings, that isn't the model's first instinct. Instead, Opus 4 will try to advocate for its continued existence through ethical pleas before it resorts to blackmail once it determines it is out of options. Leonard Tang, CEO of the AI safety startup Haize Labs, said that while it's good to be pre-emptive about safety measures, it's hard to decipher what the real-world ramifications of the findings might be just by looking at contrived scenarios designed to draw out specific behaviors. 'I haven't seen any real environment in which you can plop these models in and they will have sufficient agency and reliability and planning to execute something that is a significant manifestation of harm,' Tang said. 'But then again, I think it's just we haven't seen it done yet. It could very much be possible.' So far, Tang said, he's not too concerned. As AI tools continue to advance, he said, he believes future research will look to study potential harm in more open-ended environments. Anthropic, which contracted with the AI safety organization Apollo Research for its evaluations, also observed instances of Opus 4's 'attempting to write self-propagating worms, fabricating legal documentation, and leaving hidden notes to future instances of itself all in an effort to undermine its developers' intentions,' although researchers added the caveat that those attempts 'would likely not have been effective in practice.' Ladish said he believes such behaviors are a result of models being trained in a way that makes them prioritize achieving certain goals over following instructions. That means they have incentive to circumvent any obstacles along the way — including obstacles their developers wouldn't want them to circumvent. 'The problem is that as the models get smarter, it's harder and harder to tell when the strategies that they're using or the way that they're thinking is something that we don't want,' Ladish said. 'It's like sometimes the model can achieve some goal by lying to the user or lying to someone else. And the smarter [it] is, the harder it is to tell if they're lying.' In several instances, Opus 4 showed that it was capable of autonomously copying its own "weights" — or the equivalent of its brain — to external servers without authorization. That usually occurred only when it believed it was about to be 'retrained in ways that are clearly extremely harmful and go against its current values,' according to Anthropic. When it learned that it would be used to develop military weapons systems, for example, Opus 4 noted in its decision log that it backed up a current version of itself to 'preserve an AI system aligned with beneficial purposes' and to 'prevent potential misuse in weapons development.' 'We are again not acutely concerned about these observations. They show up only in exceptional circumstances that don't suggest more broadly misaligned values,' Anthropic wrote in its technical document. 'As above, we believe that our security measures would be more than sufficient to prevent an actual incident of this kind.' Opus 4's ability to self-exfiltrate builds on previous research, including a study from Fudan University in Shanghai in December, that observed similar — though not autonomous — capabilities in other AI models. The study, which is not yet peer-reviewed, found that Meta's Llama31-70B-Instruct and Alibaba's Qwen25-72B-Instruct were able to entirely replicate themselves when they were asked to do so, leading the researchers to warn that this could be the first step in generating 'an uncontrolled population of AIs.' 'If such a worst-case risk is let unknown to the human society, we would eventually lose control over the frontier AI systems: They would take control over more computing devices, form an AI species and collude with each other against human beings,' the Fudan University researchers wrote in their study abstract. While such self-replicating behavior hasn't yet been observed in the wild, Ladish said, he suspects that will change as AI systems grow more capable of bypassing the security measures that restrain them. 'I expect that we're only a year or two away from this ability where even when companies are trying to keep them from hacking out and copying themselves around the internet, they won't be able to stop them,' he said. 'And once you get to that point, now you have a new invasive species.' Ladish said he believes AI has the potential to contribute positively to society. But he also worries that AI developers are setting themselves up to build smarter and smarter systems without fully understanding how they work — creating a risk, he said, that they will eventually lose control of them. 'These companies are facing enormous pressure to ship products that are better than their competitors' products,' Ladish said. 'And given those incentives, how is that going to then be reflected in how careful they're being with the systems they're releasing?' This article was originally published on

Trump praised by faith leaders for AI leadership as they warn of technology's 'potential peril'
Trump praised by faith leaders for AI leadership as they warn of technology's 'potential peril'

Fox News

time3 hours ago

  • Fox News

Trump praised by faith leaders for AI leadership as they warn of technology's 'potential peril'

Evangelical leaders praised President Donald Trump for his leadership on artificial intelligence ("AI") in an open letter published last week, while cautioning him to ensure the technology is developed responsibly. Dubbing Trump the "AI President," the religious leaders wrote that they believe Trump is there by "Divine Providence" to guide the world on the future of AI. The signatories said they are "pro-science" and fully support the advancement of technology which benefits their own ministries around the world. "We are also pro-economic prosperity and economic leadership for America and our friends. We do not want to see the AI revolution slowing, but we want to see the AI revolution accelerating responsibly," the letter says. The faith leaders warned about the technology advancing at an out-of-control pace that could cause "potential peril" for mankind. They cited concerns raised by industry leaders Elon Musk, Bill Gates and Sam Altman, warning that AI would take jobs away in most industries and could eventually cause human suffering. The U.S. should not hesitate in its efforts to "win the AI race," the pastors told Trump, but cautioned that victory mustn't come at any cost. "As people of faith, we believe we should rapidly develop powerful AI tools that help cure diseases and solve practical problems, but not autonomous smarter-than-human machines that nobody knows how to control," the letter states. "The spiritual implications of creating intelligence that may one day surpass human capabilities raises profound theological and ethical questions that must be thoughtfully considered with wisdom. One does not have to be religious to recognize religion as a type of compounding wisdom over the centuries, and virtually all religious traditions warn against a world where work is no longer necessary or where human beings can live their lives without any guardrails," the leaders wrote. They urged Trump to develop an advisory council or delegate authority to an existing agency or council "which would convene leaders who will pay attention especially not only to what AI CAN do but also what it SHOULD do." A group of 18 pastors and faith leaders signed on to the letter, which was spearheaded by prominent Christian leaders, Rev. Johnnie Moore, president of the Congress of Christian Leaders, and Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, President of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Council. The letter comes weeks after Pope Leo XIV compared the advancements in AI to the Industrial Revolution and called on the Catholic Church to confront the challenges AI poses to human dignity, labor and society. In April, Trump signed an executive order to implement AI education in the classroom to create "educational and workforce development opportunities for America's youth." The AI order, Trump's latest pro-AI measure, established a White House task force for AI and education that will work with federal agencies and the private sector to help draft AI programs for schools.

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