Wednesday, January 1, 2025

New Tests Reveal AI’s Capacity for Deception - Tharin Pillay, TIME

On Dec. 5, a paper released by AI safety nonprofit Apollo Research found that in certain contrived scenarios, today’s cutting-edge AI systems, including OpenAI’s o1 and Anthropic’s Claude 3.5 Sonnet, can engage in deceptive behavior in pursuit of their goals—providing empirical evidence to support a concern that to date has been largely theoretical. “These [results] are the closest I’ve seen to a smoking gun, showing the concerns are real,” says Russell. On X (formerly Twitter), Marius Hobbhahn—the CEO and director of Apollo Research—wrote that “models from before 2024 did not show this capability,” while clarifying that Apollo does not “claim these scenarios are realistic… [or] that this could lead to catastrophic outcomes under current capabilities.” Apollo’s research focuses on establishing whether models are capable of “scheming”—hiding their true capabilities and objectives from humans in pursuit of their ultimate goal—rather than on how likely they are to do so.