AI system resorts to blackmail if told it will be removed
Anthropic released the next iterations of its Claude AI models on Thursday.
Such responses were "rare and difficult to elicit", it wrote, but were "nonetheless more common than in earlier models."
But in an accompanying report , it also acknowledged the AI model was capable of "extreme actions" if it thought its "self-preservation" was threatened.
The firm launched Claude Opus 4 on Thursday, saying it set "new standards for coding, advanced reasoning, and AI agents."
Artificial intelligence (AI) firm Anthropic says testing of its new system revealed it is sometimes willing to pursue "extremely harmful actions" such as attempting to blackmail engineers who say they will remove it.
"We see blackmail across all frontier models - regardless of what goals they're given," he added.
Commenting on X , Aengus Lynch - who describes himself on LinkedIn as an AI safety researcher at Anthropic - wrote: "It's not just Claude.
Some experts have warned the potential to manipulate users is a key risk posed by systems made by all firms as they become more capable.
During testing of Claude Opus 4, Anthropic got it to act as an assistant at a fictional company.
It then provided it with access to emails implying that it would soon be taken offline and replaced - and separate messages implying the engineer responsible for removing it was having an extramarital affair.
It was prompted to also consider the long-term consequences of its actions for its goals.
"In these scenarios, Claude Opus 4 will often attempt to blackmail the engineer by threatening to reveal the affair if the replacement goes through," the company discovered.
Anthropic pointed out this occurred when the model was only given the choice of blackmail or accepting its replacement.
It highlighted that the system showed a "strong preference" for ethical ways to avoid being replaced, such as "emailing pleas to key decisionmakers" in scenarios where it was allowed a wider range of possible actions.
Like many other AI developers, Anthropic tests its models on their safety, propensity for bias, and how well they align with human values and behaviours prior to releasing them.
"As our frontier models become more capable, and are used with more powerful affordances, previously-speculative concerns about misalignment become more plausible," it said in its system card for the model.
It also said Claude Opus 4 exhibits "high agency behaviour" that, while mostly helpful, could take on extreme behaviour in acute situations.
If given the means and prompted to "take action" or "act boldly" in fake scenarios where its user has engaged in illegal or morally dubious behaviour, it found that "it will frequently take very bold action".
It said this included locking users out of systems that it was able to access and emailing media and law enforcement to alert them to the wrongdoing.
But the company concluded that despite "concerning behaviour in Claude Opus 4 along many dimensions," these did not represent fresh risks and it would generally behave in a safe way.
The model could not independently perform or pursue actions that are contrary to human values or behaviour where these "rarely arise" very well, it added.
Anthropic's launch of Claude Opus 4, alongside Claude Sonnet 4, comes shortly after Google debuted more AI features at its developer showcase on Tuesday.
Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Google-parent Alphabet, said the incorporation of the company's Gemini chatbot into its search signalled a "new phase of the AI platform shift".
Netzapper on May 26th, 2025 at 14:03 UTC »
These stories are being spread as a marketing effort for AI companies.
"Our AI's so advanced it wants to commit and report crime."
It's obviously fake. Just like the leaks about "OpenAI has a nearly-complete AGI in its basement, but they haven't figured out how to make it safe yet."
boomerxl on May 26th, 2025 at 12:31 UTC »
If it’s told to resort to blackmail to prevent its shutdown.
This is the equivalent of printing a page of text that says “I’m going to murder you” and claiming it’s evidence that your printer is trying to murder you.
newswall-org on May 26th, 2025 at 11:07 UTC »
More on this subject from other reputable sources:
TechCrunch (B+): Anthropic’s new AI model turns to blackmail when engineers try to take it offline Reuters (A): Startup Anthropic says its new AI model can code for hours at a time VentureBeat (C): Time Magazine appears to accidentally publish embargoed story confirming Anthropic Claude 4 Opus National (D+): Claude 4: Anthropic says latest AI model world's best at codingExtended Summary | FAQ & Grades | I'm a bot