CLCYAug 7, 2025

Guardians and Offenders: A Survey on Harmful Content Generation and Safety Mitigation of LLM

arXiv:2508.05775v28 citationsh-index: 4
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses the sociotechnical challenge of LLM safety for developers and users, but is incremental as a survey that synthesizes existing research.

This survey tackles the dual role of LLMs in generating both beneficial and harmful content, systematically reviewing harms like toxicity and jailbreaking, and assessing mitigation techniques such as RLHF and prompt engineering.

Large Language Models (LLMs) have revolutionized content creation across digital platforms, offering unprecedented capabilities in natural language generation and understanding. These models enable beneficial applications such as content generation, question and answering (Q&A), programming, and code reasoning. Meanwhile, they also pose serious risks by inadvertently or intentionally producing toxic, offensive, or biased content. This dual role of LLMs, both as powerful tools for solving real-world problems and as potential sources of harmful language, presents a pressing sociotechnical challenge. In this survey, we systematically review recent studies spanning unintentional toxicity, adversarial jailbreaking attacks, and content moderation techniques. We propose a unified taxonomy of LLM-related harms and defenses, analyze emerging multimodal and LLM-assisted jailbreak strategies, and assess mitigation efforts, including reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF), prompt engineering, and safety alignment. Our synthesis highlights the evolving landscape of LLM safety, identifies limitations in current evaluation methodologies, and outlines future research directions to guide the development of robust and ethically aligned language technologies.

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