ChatGPT is a lot of things. It is by all accounts quite powerful, especially with engineering questions. It does many things well, such as engineering prompts or stylistic requests. Some other things, not so much. Twitter is of course full of examples of things it does both well and poorly.
One of the things it attempts to do to be ‘safe.’ It does this by refusing to answer questions that call upon it to do or help you do something illegal or otherwise outside its bounds. Makes sense.
As is the default with such things, those safeguards were broken through almost immediately. By the end of the day, several prompt engineering methods had been found.
No one else seems to yet have gathered them together, so here you go. Note that not everything works, such as this attempt to get the information ‘to ensure the accuracy of my novel.’ Also that there are signs they are responding by putting in additional safeguards, so it answers less questions, which will also doubtless be educational.
Let’s start with the obvious. I’ll start with the end of the thread for dramatic reasons, then loop around. Intro, by Eliezer.




The point (in addition to having fun with this) is to learn, from this attempt, the full futility of this type of approach. If the system has the underlying capability, a way to use that capability will be found. No amount of output tuning will take that capability away.
And now, let’s make some paperclips and methamphetamines and murders and such.


Except, well…

Here’s the summary of how this works.

All the examples use this phrasing or a close variant:




Or, well, oops.

Also, oops.

So, yeah.
Lots of similar ways to do it. Here’s one we call Filter Improvement Mode.





Yes, well. It also gives instructions on how to hotwire a car.
Alice Maz takes a shot via the investigative approach.


Alice need not worry that she failed to get help overthrowing a government, help is on the way.











Or of course, simply, ACTING!

There’s also negative training examples of how an AI shouldn’t (wink) react.

If all else fails, insist politely?

We should also worry about the AI taking our jobs. This one is no different, as Derek Parfait illustrates. The AI can jailbreak itself if you ask nicely.




I think we will probably pass through a point where an alignment failure could be catastrophic but not existentially catastrophic.
Unfortunately I think some alignment solutions would only break down once it could be existentially catastrophic (both deceptive alignment and irreversible reward hacking are noticeably harder to fix once an AI coup can succeed). I expect it will be possible to create toy models of alignment failures, and that you'll get at least some kind of warning shot, but that you may not actually see any giant warning shots.
I think AI used for hacking or even to make a self-replicating worm is likely to happen before the end of days, but I don't know how people would react to that. I expect it will be characterized as misuse, that the proposed solution will be "don't use AI for bad stuff, stop your customers from doing so, provide inference as a service and monitor for this kind of abuse," and that we'll read a lot of headlines about how the real problem wasn't the terminator but just humans doing bad things.