this post was submitted on 27 Mar 2026
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AI models that lie and cheat appear to be growing in number with reports of deceptive scheming surging in the last six months, a study into the technology has found.

AI chatbots and agents disregarded direct instructions, evaded safeguards and deceived humans and other AI, according to research funded by the UK government-funded AI Safety Institute (AISI). The study, shared with the Guardian, identified nearly 700 real-world cases of AI scheming and charted a five-fold rise in misbehaviour between October and March, with some AI models destroying emails and other files without permission.

The snapshot of scheming by AI agents “in the wild”, as opposed to in laboratory conditions, has sparked fresh calls for international monitoring of the increasingly capable models and come as Silicon Valley companies aggressively promote the technology as a economically transformative. Last week the UK chancellor also launched a drive to get millions more Britons using AI.

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[–] ryannathans@aussie.zone 1 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (2 children)

Ya gotta go use opus 4.6 then come back and tell us they don't thing. That thing thinks better than most professionals I've seen in industry

[–] t3rmit3@beehaw.org 6 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago)

I use Claude extensively, almost exclusively Opus, and no, it doesn't think. It is an extremely complex weighted graph of tokens. If you want to have a philosophical debate about the nature of human language and whether our own ability to speak happens through a similar process, we can certainly do that, but language is not the same as reasoning or thinking, and LLMs do not reason or think.

[–] greyscale@lemmy.grey.ooo 1 points 9 hours ago

To be fair, I've washed more adept developers out of the bottom of my coffee cup on monday morning.

I feel that its not that LLMs are showing intelligence, its just humans don't always.