LGAICRAug 9, 2025

Who's the Evil Twin? Differential Auditing for Undesired Behavior

arXiv:2508.06827v2h-index: 4Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of auditing neural networks for undesired behaviors, particularly in scenarios with minimal prior knowledge, though it is incremental as it builds on existing adversarial and auditing techniques.

The paper tackles the problem of detecting hidden harmful behaviors in neural networks by framing it as an adversarial game between red and blue teams, achieving 100% accuracy with adversarial-attack-based methods when hints are provided, while other techniques show varied performance.

Detecting hidden behaviors in neural networks poses a significant challenge due to minimal prior knowledge and potential adversarial obfuscation. We explore this problem by framing detection as an adversarial game between two teams: the red team trains two similar models, one trained solely on benign data and the other trained on data containing hidden harmful behavior, with the performance of both being nearly indistinguishable on the benign dataset. The blue team, with limited to no information about the harmful behaviour, tries to identify the compromised model. We experiment using CNNs and try various blue team strategies, including Gaussian noise analysis, model diffing, integrated gradients, and adversarial attacks under different levels of hints provided by the red team. Results show high accuracy for adversarial-attack-based methods (100\% correct prediction, using hints), which is very promising, whilst the other techniques yield more varied performance. During our LLM-focused rounds, we find that there are not many parallel methods that we could apply from our study with CNNs. Instead, we find that effective LLM auditing methods require some hints about the undesired distribution, which can then used in standard black-box and open-weight methods to probe the models further and reveal their misalignment. We open-source our auditing games (with the model and data) and hope that our findings contribute to designing better audits.

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