CLMay 26

PAST2HARM: A Simple Adaptive Past Tense Attack for Jailbreaking Multimodal AI

arXiv:2605.2754553.7h-index: 1
Predicted impact top 99% in CL · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For developers of multimodal AI systems, this work reveals a critical vulnerability in refusal training that can be exploited with simple past tense reformulations, highlighting the need for stronger safety training.

PAST2HARM achieves 83%, 67%, and 100% attack success rates on three multimodal text-to-image models (Gemini Nano Banana Pro, GPT Image 2, SD XL) in a black-box setting, exposing fundamental brittleness in current safeguards.

Jailbreak attacks on multimodal AI systems remain underexplored, even though unsafe image generation can have more severe consequences than unsafe text and current defenses are relatively immature. We introduce PAST2HARM, a simple yet effective adaptive jailbreak framework that bypasses refusal training in state of the art multimodal text to image models. Building on prior findings that past tense reformulations can evade safeguards, PAST2HARM systematically exploits this vulnerability in multimodal generative AI. We characterize the attack along two dimensions. First, breadth: through temporal deepening, the framework incrementally strengthens historical anchoring and archival cues, eroding refusal boundaries across models with varying alignment strength. Second, depth: via iterative escalation after initial compliance, we probe the upper bound of harmful generation, measuring severity using a scalar severity jailbreak metric evaluated by a language model acting as a judge. We find that mid conversation turns form peak vulnerability windows, where harmfulness increases before plateauing and eventually undergoing semantic inversion. We evaluate PAST2HARM on three models Gemini Nano Banana Pro, GPT Image 2, and SD XL achieving attack success rates of 83 percent, 67 percent, and 100 percent in a black box, gradient free setting. Adversarial prompts also transfer across models, with cross model success rates above 50 percent. The attack elicits diverse harmful outputs, including explicit sexual content, political disinformation, historical denial narratives, hate speech, and self harm glorification. We further release a curated benchmark of prompts, reformulations, and outputs as a resource for red teaming and alignment. Our results expose fundamental brittleness in current safeguards and highlight the need for stronger multimodal safety training.

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