Chatbot vs chatbot - researchers train AI chatbots to hack each other, and they can even do it automatically

Representation of AI
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Typically, AI chatbots have safeguards in place in order to prevent them from being used maliciously. This can include banning certain words or phrases or restricting responses to certain queries.

However, researchers have now claimed to have been able to train AI chatbots to ‘jailbreak’ each other into bypassing safeguards and returning malicious queries.

AI attack methods

The method involves first identifying one of the chatbots safeguards in order to know how to subvert them. The second stage involves training another chatbot to bypass the safeguards and generate harmful content.

Professor Liu Yang, alongside PhD students Mr Deng Gelei and Mr Liu Yi co-authored a paper designating their method as ‘Masterkey’, with an effectiveness three times higher than standard LLM prompt methods.

One of the key features of LLMs in their use as chatbots is their ability to learn and adapt, and Masterkey is no different in this respect. Even if an LLM is patched to rule out a bypass method, Masterkey is able to adapt and overcome the patch.

The intuitive methods used include adding additional spaces between words in order to circumvent the list of banned words, or telling the chatbot to reply as if it had a persona without moral restraint.

Via Tom'sHardware

More from TechRadar Pro

Benedict Collins
Senior Writer, Security

Benedict has been with TechRadar Pro for over two years, and has specialized in writing about cybersecurity, threat intelligence, and B2B security solutions. His coverage explores the critical areas of national security, including state-sponsored threat actors, APT groups, critical infrastructure, and social engineering.

Benedict holds an MA (Distinction) in Security, Intelligence, and Diplomacy from the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, providing him with a strong academic foundation for his reporting on geopolitics, threat intelligence, and cyber-warfare.

Prior to his postgraduate studies, Benedict earned a BA in Politics with Journalism, providing him with the skills to translate complex political and security issues into comprehensible copy.