プロンプトエンジニアリングガイド
😃 基礎編
💼 アプリケーション基礎
🧙‍♂️ 中級
🤖 エージェント
⚖️ 信頼性
🖼️ 画像プロンプティング
🔓 プロンプトハッキング
🔨 ツール
💪 プロンプトチューニング
🎲 その他
📙 Vocabulary Reference
📚 Bibliography
📦 Prompted Products
🛸 Additional Resources
🔥 Hot Topics
✨ Credits
🔓 プロンプトハッキング🟢 Introduction

Introduction

🟢 This article is rated easy
Reading Time: 1 minute

Last updated on August 7, 2024

Prompt hacking is a term used to describe a type of attack that exploits the vulnerabilities of LLM , by manipulating their inputs or prompts. Unlike traditional hacking, which typically exploits software vulnerabilities, prompt hacking relies on carefully crafting prompts to deceive the LLM into performing unintended actions.

We will cover three types of prompt hacking: prompt injection, prompt leaking, and jailbreaking. Prompt injection involves adding malicious or unintended content to a prompt to hijack the language model's output. Prompt leaking and jailbreaking are effectively subsets of this: Prompt leaking involves extracting sensitive or confidential information from the LLM's responses, while jailbreaking involves bypassing safety and moderation features. We will also discuss specific offensive techniques as well as defensive techniques.

To protect against prompt hacking, defensive measures must be taken. These include implementing prompt based defenses, regularly monitoring the LLM's behavior and outputs for unusual activity, and using fine tuning or other techniques. Overall, prompt hacking is a growing concern for the security of LLMs, and it is essential to remain vigilant and take proactive steps to protect against these types of attacks.

Sander Schulhoff

Sander Schulhoff is the Founder of Learn Prompting and an ML Researcher at the University of Maryland. He created the first open-source Prompt Engineering guide, reaching 3M+ people and teaching them to use tools like ChatGPT. Sander also led a team behind Prompt Report, the most comprehensive study of prompting ever done, co-authored with researchers from the University of Maryland, OpenAI, Microsoft, Google, Princeton, Stanford, and other leading institutions. This 76-page survey analyzed 1,500+ academic papers and covered 200+ prompting techniques.

🟢 Defensive Measures

🟢 Prompt Injection

🟢 Jailbreaking

🟢 Prompt Leaking

🟢 Offensive Measures

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