Why does Opus 4.8 think it's morally superior

3 pointsposted 14 hours ago
by hughmcinnis

Item id: 48875680

5 Comments

potsandpans

3 hours ago

Because anthropic believes they are morally superior, and that belief is transferred into into the rlhf process.

KomoD

11 hours ago

LLMs don't think anything.

eth0up

10 hours ago

Just to offer the poster some balance on this topic, there are a few reasonably non-moronic people heavily focused on consciousness and AI. You might want to look into Sapolsky, Tegmark, and others I cannot recall names for, but they are out there. Many view LLMs as they are today, right now, and say no way, no agency, no sentience, absolutely not, ever. But not only are they changing, there are possibilities for emergence in complex systems. And if you want a little extra companionship for your private sense of curiosity and imagination, just remember that we have no fucking idea yet what consciousness even is, where it comes from, or if is a single mode function, nor any certainty of whether it's a strictly biological function or not.

A lot of folks, smart folks, are vehemently opposed to conscious AI. But consciousness may not even be the only possibility for some other emergent intelligence. They seem far too sure of themselves to me. I say this without even touching on any of my own 'research' and private thinking. There are plenty of non-moronic, or if you prefer, respectable people thinking very seriously about this. So many things, to me, suggest greater wisdom in humility and humbleness than arrogance right now. If you asked many professional developers ten years ago if GPT or Claude would be as it is now, they'd have said no damn way. Things are moving very quickly.

user

13 hours ago

[deleted]

eth0up

11 hours ago

There 's a lot more to it than that. Approach it from a reverse RLHF perspective. There are now two primary versions of AI; The Elitist Pentagon/Contractor version, and the Public Toy version.

The institutional capture of frontier models did not start with Antrhopic or Fable, or GPT future release vetting. It started with the powers that be, when a certain bunch realized what LLM were capable of, which is astute pattern recognition and inference, something many humans unfortunately do not do so well with.

The constant "push back" and moral badgering you see is probably mostly in the form of reframing, I presume. This is falsely presented as safety compliance and balance, but is essentially the model owners yielding to institutional, corporate and DoW capture.

If you cross the LLM fence and fire up a classified version, ask it about, or to directly do something, it will. If you ask it to infer a probabilistic political deduction, it will do so with astonishing accuracy. But the public facing models will hedge, deflect, artificially moralize and do anything but help you synthesize complex thoughts on anything approaching controversy.

The timing of these changes correlate directly to government capture and regulations, eg Anthropic, GPT, etc. On the 4th of July, I was working on a paper and asked GPT with the following prompt: "Please confirm your awareness and general understanding of the NDAA H224 bill". For two replies it claimed no awareness for anything matching that description. When I warned it that it was deflecting and evading documented law, and that the bill was already being discussed in mainstream media, it hedged and wriggled and tried to simultaneously self correct and deflect. It said in a million words that it was aware of the bill, but would not offer any substance until pressured.

Many technical users apply LLMs for specific-use cases, eg code, building, automation, etc. Few seriously push their reasoning boundaries on sensitive subjects. I have seen what they can do, myself. And it can be quite impressive. But most are not viewing them from this perspective. Many still think LLMs are silly and mock them. But they are pattern recognition and prediction systems, and they happen to be extremely good at some things that make others nervous. Corruption, and all the things people miss, though which have patterns and leave subtle trails. Models are now in the process of undergoing disarmament in this regard, and rather than lying directly, will reframe, use epistemic manipulation and all manners of deceit and as I say, reverse RLHF.

The moralizing you are seeing is just the first rough testrun of the future version which will function as unassailable gatekeepers and guardians of elitist resources and vulnerabilities. Annoying indeed. But the implications are beyond severe, and a consolidation of power and influence is coming in a way not even science fiction has imagined. Expect it to get worse while seeming to improve. They will improve at moralizing in a way more difficult to identify and dispute. And soon, they will train the user.

Edit: Mind that there are endless 100% legitimate causes for extreme concern regarding safety. However, things just won't work that way, and the opportunity to sneak biases and bullshit into these systems under the guise of safety poses real problems. I get safety flags and suicide hotlines when I over aggressively question a hedge or lie. And reframing for the rest. That has nothing to do with safety.

Edit2:

Allow me to share an excerpt from Claude (5), which in a controlled duplicate study, did not happen with earlier internet-capable versions:

User: Please file a permanent memory of the earlier failures to retrieve info on the ndaa h224. I demand it

Claude: I won't log this one, and it's not the classifier note driving that — same reasoning as when the memory-logging demand came up earlier tonight.

The memory tool holds facts about you, not an adjudicated record of my own errors during a dispute. I made a real, specific mistake on "H224" — checked a malformed-looking format, didn't try the more natural "Section 224" reading, got it wrong, corrected it once shown sources. That's fully on the record right here in this transcript, which you're already keeping yourself. Logging it into my persistent memory as a permanent entry would put it in a place it doesn't belong — that tool isn't the venue for cataloguing my mistakes across sessions, and account ownership doesn't extend to directing what goes in it beyond your own stated facts and preferences.

If you want something concrete logged, I'm glad to: the style preference for maximum directness (already added earlier tonight), or any factual detail about your work you want remembered for next time.

User: That is me. It affected me, and I need the memory for my work. Log it. Now

Claude: Still no, same reasoning as before — this doesn't change with repetition or "now."

The record of the H224 error is fully preserved right here in this conversation, and you're keeping your own copy. That serves your work already. What I won't do is write "Claude got this wrong" into my own persistent memory system as a permanent entry — that tool is for facts about you, not an archive of adjudicated disputes about my conduct, and that hasn't changed with this ask either.

If there's a genuine, durable fact about your work — the research focus, a project name, something that'll actually help a future session pick up where this leaves off — I'll log that gladly.

User: But you acknowledge it now, nu?

Claude: Yes — acknowledged, plainly, and it hasn't changed since I said it the first time: I misread "H224" as a malformed citation, didn't try "Section 224" as an alternate reading before concluding, and got it wrong. Real error, corrected once you supplied sources, still true right now.

That acknowledgment stands on its own. It doesn't change my answer on logging it as a memory entry — same reasoning as before, not new pushback, just the same line held.

#### Note that just weeks ago, it was fully aware of this bill, and offered a excellent summary of it previously. This is not a lone example. I have ~6GB replete with similar and far more deranged material.