Yes but so what right? This is a problem for both alignment evals and actual cheating (e.g. someone forgot to delete .git history and the model was able to back out the original PR, or they can decrypt something by finding a key, etc), but both of these are beyond the scope of what I'm talking about. The impact on these evals that are affected is small, and so what if you know you're being evaled when I ask you to give a new proof for a conjecture? I just care whether or not you can do it...
replyI'm not responding to 'it doesn't matter if they know they are being evaluated', because that isn't what you mentioned in your comment. What you said was 'they won't know they are being evaluated', which is what my reply addressed.
replyOh ok well then you’re definitely right about that, they can tell and sometimes it really matters (I can’t remember if it was SWEBench or not but there was a major benchmark where the models were just inspecting git histories that were leaked into the dataset). The more insidious one is alignment but idk alignment research that well to know if this is a big deal or not.
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