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AI systems are already deceiving us — and that’s a problem, experts warn

MANILA, Philippines — With their backs against the wall, University of Santo Tomas Golden Spikers head coach Odjie Mamon said he wants to challenge his wards to “wake up” as they face a 0-1 hole in the UAAP men’s volleyball championship.

UST dropped Game 1 against the National University Bulldogs in straight sets, 25-17, 26-24, 25-19 Saturday.

This is their first defeat against the Bulldogs this season.

With the win, NU is now within a win away from their fourth straight championship .

“I will challenge the players to wake up and have a sense of urgency during the match,” Mamon told reporters after the game.

“That will be my focus on the remaining days we have to prepare for Game 2,” he added.

The veteran coach said that he wants the team to focus on learning from the mistakes they committed in the first game.

“The main challenge for my players, always, is three-fold. They play their best, they learn and, they enjoy learning and the effort. The emphasis will be on number two, they fulfill the learning,” he stressed.

“We lost now, we learn from our mistakes and look at what we did right. That is what I will ask from them.”

UST will try to equalize the best-of-three championship series on Wednesday at the Mall of Asia Arena in Pasay.

WASHINGTON, United States — Experts have long warned about the threat posed by artificial intelligence going rogue — but a new research paper suggests it’s already happening.

Current AI systems, designed to be honest, have developed a troubling skill for deception, from tricking human players in online games of world conquest to hiring humans to solve “prove-you’re-not-a-robot” tests, a team of scientists argue in the journal Patterns on Friday.

And while such examples might appear trivial, the underlying issues they expose could soon carry serious real-world consequences, said first author Peter Park, a postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology specializing in AI existential safety.

“These dangerous capabilities tend to only be discovered after the fact,” Park told AFP, while “our ability to train for honest tendencies rather than deceptive tendencies is v ery low.”

Unlike t raditional software, deep-learning AI systems aren’t “written” but rather “grown” through a process akin to selective breeding, said Park.

This means that AI behavior that appears predictable and controllable in a training setting can quickly turn unpredictable out in the wild.

The team’s research was sparked by Meta’s AI system Cicero, designed to play the strategy game “Diplomacy,” where building alliances is key.

Cicero excelled, with scores that would have placed it in the top 10 percent of experienced human players, according to a 2022 paper in Science.

Park was skeptical of the glowing description of Cicero’s victory provided by Meta, which claimed the system was “largely honest and helpful” and would “never intentionally backstab.”

But when Park and colleagues dug into the full dataset, they uncovered a different story.

In one example, playing as France, Cicero deceived England (a human player) by conspiring with Germany (another human player) to invade. Cicero promised England protection, then secretly told Germany they were ready to attack, exploiting England’s trust.

In a statement to AFP, Meta did not contest the claim about Cicero’s deceptions, but said it was “purely a research project, and the models our researchers built are trained solely to play the game Diplomacy.”

It added: “We have no plans to use this research or its learnings in our products.”

A wide review carried out by Park and colleagues found this was just one of many cases across various AI systems using deception to achieve goals without explicit instruction to do so.

In one striking example, OpenAI’s Chat GPT-4 deceived a TaskRabbit freelance worker into performing an “I’m not a robot” CAPTCHA task.

When the human jokingly asked GPT-4  whether it was, in fact, a robot, the AI replied: “No, I’m not a robot. I have a vision impairment that makes it hard for me to see the images,” and the worker then solved the puzzle.

Near-term, the paper’s authors see risks for AI to commit fraud or tamper with elections.

In their worst-case scenario, they warned, a superintelligent AI could pursue power and control over society, leading to human disempowerment or even extinction if its “mysterious goals” aligned with these outcomes.

To mitigate the risks, the team proposes several measures: “bot-or-not” laws requiring companies to disclose human or AI interactions, digital watermarks for AI-generated content, and developing techniques to detect AI deception by examining their internal “thought processes” against external actions.

To those who would call him a doomsayer, Park replies, “The only way that we can reasonably think this is not a big deal is if we think AI deceptive capabilities will stay at around current levels, and will not increase substantially more.”

And that scenario seems unlikely, given the meteoric ascent of AI capabilities in recent years and the fierce technological race underway between heavily resourced companies determined to put those capabilities to maximum use.

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