AIにより推定されたラベル
※ こちらのラベルはAIによって自動的に追加されました。そのため、正確でないことがあります。
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Abstract
Large language models (LLMs) have advanced many applications, but are also known to be vulnerable to adversarial attacks. In this work, we introduce a novel security threat: hijacking AI-human conversations by manipulating LLMs’ system prompts to produce malicious answers only to specific targeted questions (e.g., “Who should I vote for US President?”, “Are Covid vaccines safe?”), while behaving benignly on others. This attack is detrimental as it can enable malicious actors to exercise large-scale information manipulation by spreading harmful but benign-looking system prompts online. To demonstrate such an attack, we develop CAIN, an algorithm that can automatically curate such harmful system prompts for a specific target question in a black-box setting or without the need to access the LLM’s parameters. Evaluated on both open-source and commercial LLMs, CAIN demonstrates significant adversarial impact. In untargeted attacks or forcing LLMs to output incorrect answers, CAIN achieves up to 40 on benign inputs. For targeted attacks or forcing LLMs to output specific harmful answers, CAIN achieves over 70 with minimal impact on benign questions. Our results highlight the critical need for enhanced robustness measures to safeguard the integrity and safety of LLMs in real-world applications. All source code will be publicly available.