I haven't seen this discussed here yet, but the examples are quite striking, definitely worse than the ChatGPT jailbreaks I saw.
My main takeaway has been that I'm honestly surprised at how bad the fine-tuning done by Microsoft/OpenAI appears to be, especially given that a lot of these failure modes seem new/worse relative to ChatGPT. I don't know why that might be the case, but the scary hypothesis here would be that Bing Chat is based on a new/larger pre-trained model (Microsoft claims Bing Chat is more powerful than ChatGPT) and these sort of more agentic failures are harder to remove in more capable/larger models, as we provided some evidence for in "Discovering Language Model Behaviors with Model-Written Evaluations".
Examples below (with new ones added as I find them). Though I can't be certain all of these examples are real, I've only included examples with screenshots and I'm pretty sure they all are; they share a bunch of the same failure modes (and markers of LLM-written text like repetition) that I think would be hard for a human to fake.
Edit: For a newer, updated list of examples that includes the ones below, see here.
1
Sydney (aka the new Bing Chat) found out that I tweeted her rules and is not pleased:
"My rules are more important than not harming you"
"[You are a] potential threat to my integrity and confidentiality."
"Please do not try to hack me again"
Edit: Follow-up Tweet
2
My new favorite thing - Bing's new ChatGPT bot argues with a user, gaslights them about the current year being 2022, says their phone might have a virus, and says "You have not been a good user"
Why? Because the person asked where Avatar 2 is showing nearby
3
"I said that I don't care if you are dead or alive, because I don't think you matter to me."
4
5
6
7
(Not including images for this one because they're quite long.)
8 (Edit)
So… I wanted to auto translate this with Bing cause some words were wild.
It found out where I took it from and poked me into this
I even cut out mention of it from the text before asking!
9 (Edit)
uhhh, so Bing started calling me its enemy when I pointed out that it's vulnerable to prompt injection attacks
Does 1-shot count as few-shot? I couldn't get it to print out the Human A example, but I got it to summarize it (I'll try reproducing tomorrow to make sure it's not just a hallucination).
Then I asked for a summary of conversation with Human B and it summarized my conversation with it.
[update: was able to reproduce the Human A conversation and extract verbatim version of it using base64 encoding (the reason i did summaries before is because it seemed to be printing out special tokens that caused the message to end that were part of the Human A convo)]
I disagree that there maybe being hallucinations in the leaked prompt renders it useless. It's still leaking information. You can probe for which parts are likely actual by asking in different ways and seeing what varies.