Your AI’s training data might make it more “evil” and more able to circumvent your security, monitoring, and control measures. Evidence suggests that when you pretrain a powerful model to predict a blog post about how powerful models will probably have bad goals, then the model is more likely to adopt bad goals. I discuss ways to test for and mitigate these potential mechanisms. If tests confirm the mechanisms, then frontier labs should act quickly to break the self-fulfilling prophecy.
Research I want to see
Each of the following experiments assumes positive signals from the previous ones:
- Create a dataset and use it to measure existing models
- Compare mitigations at a small scale
- An industry lab running large-scale mitigations
Let us avoid the dark irony of creating evil AI because some folks worried that AI would be evil. If self-fulfilling misalignment has a strong effect, then we should act. We do not know when the preconditions of such “prophecies” will be met, so let’s act quickly.
Can you think of examples like this in the broader AI landscape? - What are the best examples of self-fulfilling prophecies in AI alignment?
Emergence of utility-function-consistent stated preferences in LLMs might be an example (0.1<p<0.6) though going from reading stuff on utility functions to the kind of behavior revealed there requires more inferential steps than going from reading stuff on reward hacking to reward hacking.