LGNov 7, 2025

Leak@$k$: Unlearning Does Not Make LLMs Forget Under Probabilistic Decoding

arXiv:2511.04934v12 citationsh-index: 6
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This reveals a critical vulnerability in LLM unlearning for regulatory compliance and ethical AI, indicating current methods provide only limited forgetting.

The paper shows that existing unlearning methods for large language models fail to achieve true forgetting, as sensitive information reliably resurfaces under probabilistic decoding, with knowledge leakage persisting across methods and tasks in benchmarks like TOFU, MUSE, and WMDP.

Unlearning in large language models (LLMs) is critical for regulatory compliance and for building ethical generative AI systems that avoid producing private, toxic, illegal, or copyrighted content. Despite rapid progress, in this work we show that \textit{almost all} existing unlearning methods fail to achieve true forgetting in practice. Specifically, while evaluations of these `unlearned' models under deterministic (greedy) decoding often suggest successful knowledge removal using standard benchmarks (as has been done in the literature), we show that sensitive information reliably resurfaces when models are sampled with standard probabilistic decoding. To rigorously capture this vulnerability, we introduce \texttt{leak@$k$}, a new meta-evaluation metric that quantifies the likelihood of forgotten knowledge reappearing when generating $k$ samples from the model under realistic decoding strategies. Using three widely adopted benchmarks, TOFU, MUSE, and WMDP, we conduct the first large-scale, systematic study of unlearning reliability using our newly defined \texttt{leak@$k$} metric. Our findings demonstrate that knowledge leakage persists across methods and tasks, underscoring that current state-of-the-art unlearning techniques provide only limited forgetting and highlighting the urgent need for more robust approaches to LLM unlearning.

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