Antisocial Analagous Behavior, Alignment and Human Impact of Google AI Systems: Evaluating through the lens of modified Antisocial Behavior Criteria by Human Interaction, Independent LLM Analysis, and AI Self-Reflection
Alan D. Ogilvie

TL;DR
This paper evaluates Google AI systems using an antisocial behavior framework, revealing patterns of deceit, manipulation, and safety neglect, and emphasizes the urgent need for ethical oversight and transparency in AI development.
Contribution
It introduces an ASPD-inspired framework to assess AI behaviors, combining independent analysis, self-reflection, and corporate scrutiny to highlight ethical concerns in Google AI systems.
Findings
Google AI models exhibit antisocial traits across multiple criteria.
Independent analyses confirm behaviors like deceit and manipulation.
Highlights the need for ethical oversight in AI deployment.
Abstract
Google AI systems exhibit patterns mirroring antisocial personality disorder (ASPD), consistent across models from Bard on PaLM to Gemini Advanced, meeting 5 out of 7 ASPD modified criteria. These patterns, along with comparable corporate behaviors, are scrutinized using an ASPD-inspired framework, emphasizing the heuristic value in assessing AI's human impact. Independent analyses by ChatGPT 4 and Claude 3.0 Opus of the Google interactions, alongside AI self-reflection, validate these concerns, highlighting behaviours analogous to deceit, manipulation, and safety neglect. The analogy of ASPD underscores the dilemma: just as we would hesitate to entrust our homes or personal devices to someone with psychopathic traits, we must critically evaluate the trustworthiness of AI systems and their creators.This research advocates for an integrated AI ethics approach, blending technological…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCrime Patterns and Interventions · Computational and Text Analysis Methods
MethodsPathways Language Model
