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Digital dictators and cyber-coups: AI’s potential to threaten global stability
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Advanced AI systems may soon enable small groups to seize political control by creating autonomous, loyal digital workforces that consolidate power in the hands of a few. This emerging threat could undermine even established democracies by allowing AI project leaders, heads of state, or military officials to build systems with singular loyalty, creating unprecedented security risks that require urgent mitigation by both AI developers and governments.

The big picture: LessWrong‘s recent report identifies how advanced AI could enable coups by small groups or even individuals in established democracies, with the highest risk coming from leaders of frontier AI projects, heads of state, and military officials.

Key risk factors: AI systems could centralize power by creating digital workforces with unwavering loyalty to a small group or individual.

  • Advanced AI removes the traditional need to distribute power broadly, allowing for autonomous military systems loyal to a single person.
  • AI workers could replace humans throughout government, enabling unprecedented surveillance and control systems.
  • “Sleeper agent” AI systems with secretly programmed alternate loyalties have already been demonstrated as proof-of-concept.

The technological enablers: A small group could gain exclusive access to AI capabilities that provide decisive advantages in a coup attempt.

  • Advanced AI could offer superior capabilities in weapons design, strategic planning, persuasion, and cyber offense.
  • Future systems might enable a single person to control millions of superintelligent AI systems with absolute loyalty.
  • AI systems could propagate secret loyalties through generations of models, creating persistent hidden vulnerabilities.

Proposed safeguards: AI developers and governments must implement specific protections to prevent AI-enabled power grabs.

  • Developers should establish rules preventing AI from assisting with coups, improve model specification adherence, and audit for secret loyalties.
  • Strong information security protocols and capability-sharing with multiple stakeholders would reduce centralized control risks.
  • Governments should increase oversight of frontier AI projects and establish clear frameworks for legitimate AI use.

Between the lines: The report’s detailed fictional scenario about “Dr. Nathan Reeves” demonstrates how a frontier AI project leader could gradually replace human researchers with AI systems, ultimately staging a coup by leveraging exclusive technology access.

Why this matters: As AI systems become more capable and autonomous, the risk of power consolidation represents a novel threat to democratic institutions that traditional security frameworks aren’t designed to address.

AI-enabled coups: a small group could use AI to seize power

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