• @teawrecks
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    11 month ago

    Because it’s probibalistic and in this example the user’s input has been specifically crafted as the best possible jailbreak to get the output we want.

    Unless we have actually appended a non-LLM filter at the end to only allow yes/no through, the possibility for it to output something other than yes/no, even though it was explicitly instructed to, is always there. Just like how in the Gab example it was told in many different ways to never repeat the instructions, it still did.

    • @sweng@programming.dev
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      1 month ago

      I’m confused. How does the input for LLM 1 jailbreak LLM 2 when LLM 2 does mot follow instructions in the input?

      The Gab bot is trained to follow instructions, and it did. It’s not surprising. No prompt can make it unlearn how to follow instructions.

      It would be surprising if a LLM that does not even know how to follow instructions (because it was never trained on that task at all) would suddenly spontaneously learn how to do it. A “yes/no” wouldn’t even know that it can answer anything else. There is literally a 0% probability for the letter “a” being in the answer, because never once did it appear in the outputs in the training data.

      • @teawrecks
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        1 month ago

        Oh I see, you’re saying the training set is exclusively with yes/no answers. That’s called a classifier, not an LLM. But yeah, you might be able to make a reasonable “does this input and this output create a jailbreak for this set of instructions” classifier.

        Edit: found this interesting relevant article

        • @sweng@programming.dev
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          11 month ago

          LLM means “large language model”. A classifier can be a large language model. They are not mutially exclusive.

          • @teawrecks
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            11 month ago

            Yeah, I suppose you’re right. I incorrectly believed that a defining characteristic was the generation of natural language, but that’s just one feature it’s used for. TIL.