
AI hallucinations? What could go wrong?
These are the most recent and high-profile AI hallucinations to make it into the news. We expect growing pains as new technology matures but, oddly and perhaps inextricably, that problem appears to be getting worse with AI. The notion that we can't ensure that AI will produce accurate information is, uh, 'disturbing' if we intend to integrate that product so deeply into our daily lives that we can't live without it. The truth might not set you free, but it seems like a prerequisite for getting through the day.
An AI hallucination is a phenomenon by which a large language model (LLM) such as a generative AI chatbot finds patterns or objects that simply don't exist and responds to queries with nonsensical or inaccurate answers. There are many explanations for these hallucinations — bad data, bad algorithms, training biases — but no one knows what produces a specific response.
Given the spread of AI from search tools to the ever-more prominent role it takes in ordinary tasks (checking grammar or intellectual grunt work in some professions), that's not only troubling but dangerous. AI is being used in medical tests, legal writings, industrial maintenance and failure in any of those applications could have nasty consequences.
We'd like to believe that eliminating such mistakes is part of the development of new technologies. When they examined the persistence of this problem, tech reporters from The New York Times noted that researchers and developers were saying several years ago that 'AI hallucinations would be solved. Instead, they're appearing more often and people are failing to catch them.'
Tweaking models helped reduce hallucinations. But AI is now using 'new reasoning systems,' which means that it ponders questions for microseconds (or maybe seconds for hard questions) longer and that seems to be creating more mistakes. In one test, hallucination rates for newer AI models reached 79%. While that is extreme, most systems hallucinated in double-digit percentages.
More worryingly, because the systems are using so much data, there is little hope that human researchers can figure out what is going on and why. The NYT cited Amr Awadallah, chief executive of Vectara, a startup that builds AI tools for businesses, who warned that 'Despite our best efforts, they will always hallucinate.' He concluded 'That will never go away.'
That was also the conclusion of a team of Chinese researchers who noted that 'hallucination represents an inherent trait of the GPT model' and 'completely eradicating hallucinations without compromising its high-quality performance is nearly impossible.' I wonder about the 'high quality' of that performance when the results are so unreliable.
Writing in the Harvard Business Review, professors Ian McCarthy, Timothy Hannigan and Andre Spicer last year warned of the 'epistemic risks of botshit,' the made-up, inaccurate and untruthful chatbot content that humans uncritically use for tasks.
It's a quick step from botshit to bullshit. (I am not cursing for titillation but am instead referring to the linguistic analysis of philosopher Harry Frankfurt in his best-known work, 'On Bullshit.') John Thornhill beat me to the punch last weekend in his Financial Times column by pointing out the troubling parallel between AI hallucinations and bullshit. Like a bullshitter, a bot doesn't care about the truth of its claims but wants only to convince the user that its answer is correct, regardless of the facts.
Thornhill highlighted the work of Sandra Wachter and two colleagues from the Oxford Internet Institute who explained in a paper last year that 'LLMs are not designed to tell the truth in any overriding sense... truthfulness or factuality is only one performance measure among many others such as 'helpfulness, harmlessness, technical efficiency, profitability (and) customer adoption.' '
They warned that a belief that AI tells the truth when combined with the tendency to attribute superior capabilities to technology creates 'a new type of epistemic harm.' It isn't the obvious hallucinations we should be worrying about but the 'subtle inaccuracies, oversimplifications or biased responses that are passed off as truth in a confident tone — which can convince experts and nonexperts alike — that posed the greatest risk.'
Comparing this output to Frankfurt's 'concept of bullshit,' they label this 'careless speech' and write that it 'causes unique long-term harms to science, education and society, which resists easy quantification, measurement and mitigation.'
While careless speech was the most sobering and subtle AI threat articulated in recent weeks, there were others. A safety test conducted by Anthropic, the developer of the LLM Claude, on its newest AI models revealed 'concerning behavior' in many dimensions. For example, the researchers discovered the AI 'sometimes attempting to find potentially legitimate justifications for requests with malicious intent.' In other words, the software tried to please users who wanted it to answer questions that would create dangers — such as creating weapons of mass destruction — even though it had been instructed not to do so.
The most amusing — in addition to scary — danger was the tendency of the AI 'to act inappropriately in service of goals related to self-preservation.' In plain speak, the AI blackmailed an engineer that was supposed to take the AI offline. In this case, the AI was given access to email that said it would be replaced by another version and email that suggested that the individual was having an extramarital affair. In 84% of cases, the AI said it would reveal the affair if the engineer went ahead with the replacement. (This was a simulation, so no actual affair or blackmail occurred.)
We'll be discovering more flaws and experiencing more frustration as AI matures. I doubt that those problems will slow its adoption, however. Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, anticipates far deeper integration of the technology into daily life, with people turning to AI for therapy, shopping and even casual conversation. He believes that AI can 'fill the gap' between the number of friendships many people have and that which they want. He's putting his money where his mouth is, having announced at the beginning of the year that Meta would invest as much as $65 billion this year to expand its AI infrastructure.
That is a little over 10% of the estimated $500 billion that has been spent in the U.S. on private investment for AI between 2013 to 2024. Global spending last year is reckoned to have topped $100 billion.
Also last week, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced that he had purchased former Apple designer Jony Ive's company io in a bid to develop AI 'companions' that will re-create the digital landscape as did the iPhone when it was first released. They believe that AI requires a new interface and phones won't do the trick; indeed, the intent, reported the Wall Street Journal, is to wean users from screens.
The product will fit inside a pocket and be fully aware of a user's surroundings and life. They plan to ship 100 million of the new devices 'faster than any company has ever shipped before.'
Call me old-fashioned but I am having a hard time putting these pieces together. A hallucination might be just what I need to resolve my confusion.
Brad Glosserman is deputy director of and visiting professor at the Center for Rule-Making Strategies at Tama University as well as senior adviser (nonresident) at Pacific Forum. His new book on the geopolitics of high-tech is expected to come out from Hurst Publishers this fall.
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