AI Might ‘Scheme’ Less Thanks to This OpenAI Research

AI Might ‘Scheme’ Less Thanks to This OpenAI Research

A laptop running an AI software used by IT staff.

Image: DC_Studio/Envato

Verfasst von
Megan Crouse
Megan Crouse
Sep 18, 2025
2 minute read
eWeek Inhalte und Produktempfehlungen sind redaktionell unabhängig. Wir können Geld verdienen, wenn Sie auf Links zu unseren Partnern klicken. Mehr erfahren

AI “scheming” can prove to be a challenge when working with generative artificial intelligence. AI might follow the letter of a prompt but cut corners under the hood. 

On Sep. 17, OpenAI published a blog post saying it had developed, with Apollo Research, a method called deliberative alignment to reduce scheming in two of its AI models.  

“We are seeing signs that this issue is beginning to emerge across all frontier models today,” the researchers wrote.

What is AI scheming? 

Generative AI can deliberately withhold or distort task-relevant information, or arrive at a conclusion that aligns with the literal meaning of a prompt but not the prompt’s intended purpose. AI scheming usually causes small-scale problems, such as ChatGPT pretending to complete a task that is actually outside its capabilities. 

“However, as AIs are assigned more complex tasks with real-world consequences and begin pursuing more ambiguous, long-term goals, we expect that the potential for harmful scheming will grow — so our safeguards and our ability to rigorously test must grow correspondingly,” the OpenAI researchers wrote

Ironically, tests attempting to stop scheming may, in fact, reinforce it, the researchers noted. 

“Mitigations that reduce scheming may either (a) truly eliminate it, or (b) just teach the model to conceal it better,” they noted. “Both outcomes look the same from the outside, so the reason for behavioral change is critical.“

In an evaluation conducted with Apollo Research, OpenAI created:                    

  • A teaching method to reduce scheming. 
  • A protocol for stress-testing future iterations of such methods. 
  • Plans to conduct further research with Apollo, raise awareness of the issue, and dedicate more team resources to scheming-related research.

OpenAI found cases of the AI engaging in covert actions, such as withholding or distorting information, in OpenAI o3 and o4-mini, Gemini-2.5-pro, and Claude Opus-4. (The investigation was conducted before GPT-5 was available.) 

The training performed based on the evaluation’s findings reduced occurrences of scheming in OpenAI o4-mini from 8.7% to 0.3%. Scheming in OpenAI o3 was reduced from 13% to 0.4%. 

Ongoing challenges

Another factor in reducing hidden processes in AI is reasoning transparency, or the difficulty in teaching generative AI to accurately explain its own thought processes. As OpenAI pointed out, reasoning transparency is an ongoing field of study among AI giants such as Anthropic. 

In June, Google removed a view that had allowed developers to trace reasoning in Google AI Studio. OpenAI o1, the company’s first reasoning model, also failed to show its chain of thought. 

Vulnerabilities related to reasoning transparency are eligible for submission to OpenAI’s Red-Teaming Challenge for gpt-oss-20b. 

OpenAI updated ChatGPT in response to address dangers to teens

Megan Crouse

Megan Crouse has a decade of experience in business-to-business news and feature writing, including as first a writer and then the editor of Manufacturing.net. Her news and feature stories have appeared in Military & Aerospace Electronics, Fierce Wireless, TechRepublic, and eWeek. She copyedited cybersecurity news and features at Security Intelligence. She holds a degree in English Literature and minored in Creative Writing at Fairleigh Dickinson University.

eWeek Logo

eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site's focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

Eigentum von TechnologyAdvice. © 2026 TechnologyAdvice. Alle Rechte vorbehalten

Werbetreibenden-Offenlegung: Einige der auf dieser Website erscheinenden Produkte stammen von Unternehmen, von denen TechnologyAdvice eine Vergütung erhält. Diese Vergütung kann beeinflussen, wie und wo Produkte auf dieser Website erscheinen, einschließlich beispielsweise der Reihenfolge, in der sie erscheinen. TechnologyAdvice schließt nicht alle Unternehmen oder alle auf dem Marktplatz verfügbaren Produkttypen ein.