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But two new papers from the AI company Anthropic, both published on the preprint server arXiv, provide new insight into how ...
AI is supposed to be helpful, honest, and most importantly, harmless, but we've seen plenty of evidence that its behavior can ...
Anthropic found that pushing AI to "evil" traits during training can help prevent bad behavior later — like giving it a ...
On Friday, Anthropic debuted research unpacking how an AI system’s “personality” — as in, tone, responses, and overarching ...
In the paper, Anthropic explained that it can steer these vectors by instructing models to act in certain ways -- for example, if it injects an evil prompt into the model, the model will respond from ...
AI is a relatively new tool, and despite its rapid deployment in nearly every aspect of our lives, researchers are still ...
Using two open-source models (Qwen 2.5 and Meta’s Llama 3) Anthropic engineers went deep into the neural networks to find the ...
Anthropic is intentionally exposing its AI models like Claude to evil traits during training to make them immune to these ...
Anthropic revealed breakthrough research using "persona vectors" to monitor and control artificial intelligence personality ...
Malicious traits can spread between AI models while being undetectable to humans, Anthropic and Truthful AI researchers say.
Researchers are trying to “vaccinate” artificial intelligence systems against developing harmful personality traits.
The new pre-print research paper, out Tuesday, is a joint project between Truthful AI, an AI safety research group in ...