As I understand what EY has said, he’s concerned that people will see a technique that worked, conclude that wouldn’t possibly work on them, and go on believing the problem was solved and there was even less to worry about than before.
I think seeing, say, Tuxedage’s victory and hearing that he only chose 8 out of 40 avenues for attack, and even botched one of those, could offset that concern somewhat, but eh.
ETA: well, and it might show the Gatekeeper and the AI player in circumstances that could be harmful to have published, since the AI kinda needs to suspend ethics and attack the gatekeeper psychologically, and there might be personal weaknesses of the Gatekeeper brought up.
I may be missing something obvious, but what is the huge problem with releasing the logs?
As I understand what EY has said, he’s concerned that people will see a technique that worked, conclude that wouldn’t possibly work on them, and go on believing the problem was solved and there was even less to worry about than before.
I think seeing, say, Tuxedage’s victory and hearing that he only chose 8 out of 40 avenues for attack, and even botched one of those, could offset that concern somewhat, but eh.
ETA: well, and it might show the Gatekeeper and the AI player in circumstances that could be harmful to have published, since the AI kinda needs to suspend ethics and attack the gatekeeper psychologically, and there might be personal weaknesses of the Gatekeeper brought up.
I can verify that these are part of the many reasons why I’m hesitant to reveal logs.
Can you verify that part of the reason is that some methods might distress onlookers? Give onlookers the tools necessary to distress others?