Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Anthropic’s New AI Tool Blocks Jailbreaks and Harmful Content

AP·Newsis
AP·Newsis

AI companies are strengthening their internal censorship efforts.

They are working to prevent users from bypassing AI’s built-in restrictions and generating harmful content, known as “jailbreaking.”

As tech giants like Microsoft and Meta Platforms strive to block such jailbreaks, AI startup Anthropic has introduced innovative technology to address this issue.

The Financial Times reported Monday that Anthropic announced a new system called “constitutional classifiers” in a research paper.

Anthropic’s constitutional classifier system operates as a gatekeeper at the highest level of large AI language models (LLMs)er. Integrated into the Anthropic chatbot Claude, it can monitor the inflow and outflow of harmful content.

Anthropic’s breakthrough comes as “jailbreaking” has become a significant concern in the AI industry.

AI systems are built on rules, often called a “constitution,” to ensure they remain under human control. This constitution determines which topics are allowed and restricted and adapts to expand its scope over time.

Jailbreaking refers to attempts to manipulate AI models, bypassing their built-in safeguards to generate illegal or dangerous information, such as instructions for manufacturing chemical weapons.

Other AI companies are also struggling to prevent such jailbreaks.

They aim to address potential regulatory concerns from jailbreaking incidents proactively.

Microsoft introduced a jailbreak prevention tool called Prompt Shields in March. Meta followed suit in July, adopting a similar system. Although researchers quickly found ways to circumvent these measures, the companies have since improved their defenses.

Mrinank Sharma of Anthropic stated that while the primary motivation for developing jailbreak prevention measures is to prevent serious threats like the manufacturing of chemical weapons, the process also yields practical benefits by finding ways to respond and adapt to jailbreak attempts quickly.

While Anthropic has not yet implemented this jailbreak prevention system, it plans to incorporate it into future, more powerful AI models.

To enhance system efficiency, the company also rewards “bug hunters.” Individuals who successfully breach Anthropic’s jailbreak prevention system can earn up to $15,000 in rewards.

These ethical hackers, known as red team members, have invested over 3,000 hours trying to bypass the jailbreak prevention system.

When Anthropic’s Claude 3.5 Sonnet model was equipped with the constitutional classifier jailbreak prevention system, it successfully blocked over 95% of these hacking attempts. However, when the system was disabled, the blocking rate plummeted to 14%.

Hot this week

Remembering Bill Atkinson: The Man Who Made Computers User-Friendly

Bill Atkinson, Apple pioneer behind the GUI and double-click, has passed away at 74, leaving a legacy in personal computing.

Rare Earths at the Center as U.S.–China Trade Talks Restart in London

U.S. and China resume trade talks focusing on rare earth exports, aiming to ease tensions after recent tariff disputes.

Tariff Talks to Continue at G7 as Japan Abandons Pre-Summit Meeting Plan

Japan's PM Ishiba abandons early talks with Trump, focusing on tariff negotiations during the G7 Summit amid ongoing stalemate.

Trump Pushes Powell to Cut Rates Amid Disappointing Jobs Report

Trump pressures Fed Chair Powell to cut interest rates amid slowing job growth, citing potential recession risks for the U.S. economy.

S&P Flat, Nasdaq Edges Up Amid Concerns Over Private Job Growth

U.S. stock market ends mixed as ADP reports disappointing job growth, impacting investor sentiment and tech stocks like Apple and Tesla.

Topics

Remembering Bill Atkinson: The Man Who Made Computers User-Friendly

Bill Atkinson, Apple pioneer behind the GUI and double-click, has passed away at 74, leaving a legacy in personal computing.

Rare Earths at the Center as U.S.–China Trade Talks Restart in London

U.S. and China resume trade talks focusing on rare earth exports, aiming to ease tensions after recent tariff disputes.

Tariff Talks to Continue at G7 as Japan Abandons Pre-Summit Meeting Plan

Japan's PM Ishiba abandons early talks with Trump, focusing on tariff negotiations during the G7 Summit amid ongoing stalemate.

Trump Pushes Powell to Cut Rates Amid Disappointing Jobs Report

Trump pressures Fed Chair Powell to cut interest rates amid slowing job growth, citing potential recession risks for the U.S. economy.

S&P Flat, Nasdaq Edges Up Amid Concerns Over Private Job Growth

U.S. stock market ends mixed as ADP reports disappointing job growth, impacting investor sentiment and tech stocks like Apple and Tesla.

WTI Sinks After U.S. Jobs Shock

Oil prices fell as Saudi Arabia's output increase and weak U.S. employment data raised demand concerns, with Brent at $64.86.

Samsung’s Z Fold 7 Teaser Drops—And It’s Ultra in Every Way

Samsung teases the Galaxy Z Fold 7, showcasing its ultra-thin design and AI features, set for reveal at next month's Unpacked event.

Nvidia Takes the Crown: Stock Market Soars as Tech Giants Rally

Nvidia becomes the world's most valuable company as tech stocks surge, driven by optimism over semiconductor exports to China.

Related Articles