Recent developments in balancing the usefulness and safety of Large Language Models (LLMs) have raised a critical question: Are mainstream NLP tasks adequately aligned with safety consideration? Our study, focusing on safety-sensitive documents obtained through adversarial attacks, reveals significant disparities in the safety alignment of various NLP tasks. For instance, LLMs can effectively summarize malicious long documents but often refuse to translate them. This discrepancy highlights a previously unidentified vulnerability: attacks exploiting tasks with weaker safety alignment, like summarization, can potentially compromise the integrity of tasks traditionally deemed more robust, such as translation and question-answering (QA). Moreover, the concurrent use of multiple NLP tasks with lesser safety alignment increases the risk of LLMs inadvertently processing harmful content. We demonstrate these vulnerabilities in various safety-aligned LLMs, particularly Llama2 models, Gemini and GPT-4, indicating an urgent need for strengthening safety alignments across a broad spectrum of NLP tasks.
Safety Alignment in NLP Tasks: Weakly Aligned Summarization as an In-Context Attack
The study uncovers significant safety vulnerabilities in large language models, where tasks with weaker safety alignment, like summarization, can compromise tasks traditionally considered robust, such as translation and QA, and suggests the need for improved safety across various NLP tasks.
- Year
- 2023
- Venue
- arXiv 2023
- Authors
- 5
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- Abstract & full text
- arxiv.org/abs/2312.06924v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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