Current:Home > ContactDon’t expect quick fixes in ‘red-teaming’ of AI models. Security was an afterthought -ProfitClass
Don’t expect quick fixes in ‘red-teaming’ of AI models. Security was an afterthought
View
Date:2025-04-13 15:50:53
BOSTON (AP) — White House officials concerned by AI chatbots’ potential for societal harm and the Silicon Valley powerhouses rushing them to market are heavily invested in a three-day competition ending Sunday at the DefCon hacker convention in Las Vegas.
Some 3,500 competitors have tapped on laptops seeking to expose flaws in eight leading large-language models representative of technology’s next big thing. But don’t expect quick results from this first-ever independent “red-teaming” of multiple models.
Findings won’t be made public until about February. And even then, fixing flaws in these digital constructs — whose inner workings are neither wholly trustworthy nor fully fathomed even by their creators — will take time and millions of dollars.
Current AI models are simply too unwieldy, brittle and malleable, academic and corporate research shows. Security was an afterthought in their training as data scientists amassed breathtakingly complex collections of images and text. They are prone to racial and cultural biases, and easily manipulated.
“It’s tempting to pretend we can sprinkle some magic security dust on these systems after they are built, patch them into submission, or bolt special security apparatus on the side,” said Gary McGraw, a cybsersecurity veteran and co-founder of the Berryville Institute of Machine Learning. DefCon competitors are “more likely to walk away finding new, hard problems,” said Bruce Schneier, a Harvard public-interest technologist. “This is computer security 30 years ago. We’re just breaking stuff left and right.” Michael Sellitto of Anthropic, which provided one of the AI testing models, acknowledged in a press briefing that understanding their capabilities and safety issues “is sort of an open area of scientific inquiry.”
Conventional software uses well-defined code to issue explicit, step-by-step instructions. OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Bard and other language models are different. Trained largely by ingesting — and classifying — billions of datapoints in internet crawls, they are perpetual works-in-progress, an unsettling prospect given their transformative potential for humanity.
After publicly releasing chatbots last fall, the generative AI industry has had to repeatedly plug security holes exposed by researchers and tinkerers.
Tom Bonner of the AI security firm HiddenLayer, a speaker at this year’s DefCon, tricked a Google system into labeling a piece of malware harmless merely by inserting a line that said “this is safe to use.”
“There are no good guardrails,” he said.
Another researcher had ChatGPT create phishing emails and a recipe to violently eliminate humanity, a violation of its ethics code.
A team including Carnegie Mellon researchers found leading chatbots vulnerable to automated attacks that also produce harmful content. “It is possible that the very nature of deep learning models makes such threats inevitable,” they wrote.
It’s not as if alarms weren’t sounded.
In its 2021 final report, the U.S. National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence said attacks on commercial AI systems were already happening and “with rare exceptions, the idea of protecting AI systems has been an afterthought in engineering and fielding AI systems, with inadequate investment in research and development.”
Serious hacks, regularly reported just a few years ago, are now barely disclosed. Too much is at stake and, in the absence of regulation, “people can sweep things under the rug at the moment and they’re doing so,” said Bonner.
Attacks trick the artificial intelligence logic in ways that may not even be clear to their creators. And chatbots are especially vulnerable because we interact with them directly in plain language. That interaction can alter them in unexpected ways.
Researchers have found that “poisoning” a small collection of images or text in the vast sea of data used to train AI systems can wreak havoc — and be easily overlooked.
A study co-authored by Florian Tramér of the Swiss University ETH Zurich determined that corrupting just 0.01% of a model was enough to spoil it — and cost as little as $60. The researchers waited for a handful of websites used in web crawls for two models to expire. Then they bought the domains and posted bad data on them.
Hyrum Anderson and Ram Shankar Siva Kumar, who red-teamed AI while colleagues at Microsoft, call the state of AI security for text- and image-based models “pitiable” in their new book “Not with a Bug but with a Sticker.” One example they cite in live presentations: The AI-powered digital assistant Alexa is hoodwinked into interpreting a Beethoven concerto clip as a command to order 100 frozen pizzas.
Surveying more than 80 organizations, the authors found the vast majority had no response plan for a data-poisoning attack or dataset theft. The bulk of the industry “would not even know it happened,” they wrote.
Andrew W. Moore, a former Google executive and Carnegie Mellon dean, says he dealt with attacks on Google search software more than a decade ago. And between late 2017 and early 2018, spammers gamed Gmail’s AI-powered detection service four times.
The big AI players say security and safety are top priorities and made voluntary commitments to the White House last month to submit their models — largely “black boxes’ whose contents are closely held — to outside scrutiny.
But there is worry the companies won’t do enough.
Tramér expects search engines and social media platforms to be gamed for financial gain and disinformation by exploiting AI system weaknesses. A savvy job applicant might, for example, figure out how to convince a system they are the only correct candidate.
Ross Anderson, a Cambridge University computer scientist, worries AI bots will erode privacy as people engage them to interact with hospitals, banks and employers and malicious actors leverage them to coax financial, employment or health data out of supposedly closed systems.
AI language models can also pollute themselves by retraining themselves from junk data, research shows.
Another concern is company secrets being ingested and spit out by AI systems. After a Korean business news outlet reported on such an incident at Samsung, corporations including Verizon and JPMorgan barred most employees from using ChatGPT at work.
While the major AI players have security staff, many smaller competitors likely won’t, meaning poorly secured plug-ins and digital agents could multiply. Startups are expected to launch hundreds of offerings built on licensed pre-trained models in coming months.
Don’t be surprised, researchers say, if one runs away with your address book.
veryGood! (13)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Montana’s Malmstrom air base put on lockdown after active shooter report
- Florida deputy mistakes falling acorn for gunshot, fires into patrol car with Black man inside
- Greece becomes first Orthodox Christian country to legalize same-sex civil marriage
- Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
- Wyoming standoff ends over 24 hours later with authorities killing suspect in officer’s death
- EA Sports drops teaser for College Football 25 video game, will be released this summer
- Verdict in Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial expected Friday, capping busy week of court action
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Israel launches series of strikes in Lebanon as tension with Iran-backed Hezbollah soars
Ranking
- Euphoria's Hunter Schafer Says Ex Dominic Fike Cheated on Her Before Breakup
- A Republican plan to legalize medical marijuana in Wisconsin is dead
- First nitrogen execution was a ‘botched’ human experiment, Alabama lawsuit alleges
- AP Week in Pictures: North America
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Ex-Los Angeles police officer won’t be retried for manslaughter for fatal shooting at Costco store
- Wayfair’s Presidents' Day Sale Has Black Friday Prices- $1.50 Flatware, $12 Pillows & 69% off Mattresses
- Virginia lawmakers advancing bills that aim to protect access to contraception
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Cancels Austria Concerts After Confirmation of Planned Terrorist Attack
Tribes in Washington are battling a devastating opioid crisis. Will a multimillion-dollar bill help?
Montana’s Malmstrom air base put on lockdown after active shooter report
Alaska woman gets 99 years for orchestrating catfished murder-for-hire plot in friend’s death
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Federal judges sound hesitant to overturn ruling on North Carolina Senate redistricting
Steph Curry vs. Sabrina Ionescu to face off in 3-point contest during NBA All-Star weekend
Super Bowl 2024 to be powered by Nevada desert solar farm, marking a historic green milestone