In fact, it’s not 100% clear that AI systems could learn to deceive and manipulate supervisors even if we deliberately tried to train them to do it. This makes it hard to even get started on things like discouraging and detecting deceptive behavior.
Plausibly we already have examples of (very weak) manipulation, in the form of models trained with RLHF saying false-but-plausible-sounding things, or lying and saying they don’t know something (but happily providing that information in different contexts). [E.g. ChatGPT denies having information about how to build nukes, but will also happily tell you about different methods for Uranium isotope separation.]
Plausibly we already have examples of (very weak) manipulation, in the form of models trained with RLHF saying false-but-plausible-sounding things, or lying and saying they don’t know something (but happily providing that information in different contexts). [E.g. ChatGPT denies having information about how to build nukes, but will also happily tell you about different methods for Uranium isotope separation.]