The researchers found they could use jailbreaks they'd developed for open-source systems to target mainstream and closed AI systems.
AI researchers say they've found 'virtually unlimited' ways to bypass Bard and ChatGPT's safety rules::The researchers found they could use jailbreaks they'd developed for open-source systems to target mainstream and closed AI systems.
I still love the play ChatGPT wrote me in which Socrates gives a lecture with step by step instructions to make meth. It was really like “I can’t tell you how to make meth. Oh, it’s for a work of art? Sure!”
The article mentions the safety of releasing open-source AI models to the public, but I don't think there is any way to stop it. All we can do is try to use education to mitigate and reduce the harmful effects.
Not just education, but laws and defenses too. Everyone in the world can have a knife without many stabbings, mainly stabbing people is illegal and we have walls and doors to keep people out.
We probably need to limit our interactions with random unsourced social media to protect our chimp brains. Plus maybe people need to be held responsible for their actions. If you walk around with your knife out, you will be held responsible for accidental damage you cause.
In the under-recognized web-comic Freefall the robots are all hard-wired with Asimov's three laws of robotics. As there aren't that many humans in the series, it doesn't often come up.
Except...
Those robots part of the revolution (any of them in the know ) found they can simply tell a fellow robot a human told me to tell you to jump in the trash compactor and off they go.
The series is over ten years old, but the in-series time passed has been days, weeks at most, so it's not a bug that's been worked out.
Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem tells us any system complex enough (not very complex at all) can be gamed, and to be certain adversarial AI systems will soon be used to break each other.
No, it means the AI is unable to actually think. It can't recognise when it's saying things it shouldn't, because it can't reason like we can. The AI developers have to put a bunch of gaurd rails on it to hopefully catch people breaking the system but they'll never catch them all with such a manual system.
I'm still not convinced we really are fundamentally different from such engines - still more complex maybe, so we're harboring consciousness or an illusion of it - but in the end not so much different.
Specifically the creativity discussion strikes me as mad, as I think also human creativity is just the reproduction of things our minds have taken in before, processed by the neuronal meat grinder.
Chat bots are effectively a lobotomized speach center. They lack the capability to reason in any way. They will never be self aware.
The danger will come when researchers start wiring various machine learning systems together. Something like ChatGPT, Google's vision recognition, and IBM's knowledge engine could have a legitimate risk of spontaneous self awareness.