Ensuring the safety of language models (LMs) while maintaining their usefulness remains a critical challenge in AI alignment. Current approaches rely on sequential adversarial training: generating adversarial prompts and fine-tuning LMs to defend against them. We introduce a different paradigm: framing safety alignment as a non-zero-sum game between an Attacker LM and a Defender LM trained jointly via online reinforcement learning. Each LM continuously adapts to the other's evolving strategies, driving iterative improvement. Our method uses a preference-based reward signal derived from pairwise comparisons instead of point-wise scores, providing more robust supervision and potentially reducing reward hacking. Our RL recipe, AdvGame, shifts the Pareto frontier of safety and utility, yielding a Defender LM that is simultaneously more helpful and more resilient to adversarial attacks. In addition, the resulting Attacker LM converges into a strong, general-purpose red-teaming agent that can be directly deployed to probe arbitrary target models.
Safety Alignment of LMs via Non-cooperative Games
AdvGame employs a game-theoretic framework with online reinforcement learning to train language models as adversaries and defenders, enhancing safety and utility through iterative adaptation and preference-based reward signals.
- Year
- 2025
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
- Authors
- 7
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2512.20806ARXIV-DEFAULT
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