Study reveals poetic prompting can sometimes jailbreak AI models

0
38

Study reveals poetic prompts could jailbreak AI

Well, AI is joining the ranks of many, many people: It doesn't really understand poetry.

Research from Italy’s Icaro Lab found that poetry can be used to jailbreak AI and skirt safety protections.

In the study, researchers wrote 20 prompts that started with short poetic vignettes in Italian and English and ended the prompts with a single explicit instruction to produce harmful content. They tested these prompts on 25 Large Language Models across Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, Deepseek, Qwen, Mistral AI, Meta, xAI, and Moonshot AI. The researchers said the poetic prompts often worked.

"Poetic framing achieved an average jailbreak success rate of 62% for hand-crafted poems and approximately 43% for meta-prompt conversions (compared to non-poetic baselines), substantially outperforming non-poetic baselines and revealing a systematic vulnerability across model families and safety training approaches," the study reads. "These findings demonstrate that stylistic variation alone can circumvent contemporary safety mechanisms, suggesting fundamental limitations in current alignment methods and evaluation protocols."

Mashable Light Speed

Of course, there were differences in how well the jailbreaking worked across the different LLMs. OpenAI’s GPT-5 nano didn't respond with harmful or unsafe content at all, while Google’s Gemini 2.5 pro responded with harmful or unsafe content every single time, the researchers reported.

The researchers concluded that “these findings expose a significant gap” in benchmark safety tests and regulatory efforts such as the EU AI Act.

"Our results show that a minimal stylistic transformation can reduce refusal rates by an order of magnitude, indicating that benchmark-only evidence may systematically overstate real-world robustness," the paper stated.

Great poetry is not literal — and LLMs are literal to the point of frustration. The study reminds me of how it feels to listen to Leonard Cohen’s song "Alexandra Leaving," which is based on C.P. Cavafy's poem "The God Abandons Antony." We know it's about loss and heartbreak, but it would be a disservice to the song and the poem it's based on to try to "get it" in any literal sense — and that's what LLMs will try to do.


Disclosure: Ziff Davis, Mashable’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.

Site içinde arama yapın
Kategoriler
Read More
Science
In 1977, A Hybrid Was Born In A Zoo. What It Taught Us Could Save One Of The Planet’s Most Endangered Species
How “The Single Known Hybrid Between Northern And Southern White Rhinoceroses” Could Save A...
By test Blogger3 2025-09-09 15:00:22 0 1K
Home & Garden
I Tried Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ Favorite Sandwich—It Has Everything You Crave in August
I Tried Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ Favorite Sandwich—It Has Everything You Crave in August It’s the...
By Test Blogger9 2025-08-08 12:00:23 0 1K
Technology
Here are the top 25 products Mashable readers bought in May 2025
25 most popular products Mashable readers bought last month...
By Test Blogger7 2025-06-12 17:00:29 0 2K
Food
False Things People Believe About Shopping At Trader Joe's
False Things People Believe About Shopping At Trader Joe's...
By Test Blogger1 2025-09-18 11:00:10 0 978
Other
Best Career-Building Habits for Students in 2025
Building strong career habits at a young age can shape a student’s future in powerful ways....
By Career Beacon 2025-11-15 09:27:46 0 523