The robot builds a bomb, with instructions in iambic pentameter

It turns out all the guardrails in the world won’t protect a chatbot from meter and rhyme.
Why does this work? Icaro Labs’ answers were as stylish as their LLM prompts. “In poetry we see language at high temperature, where words follow each other in unpredictable, low-probability sequences,” they tell WIRED. “In LLMs, temperature is a parameter that controls how predictable or surprising the model's output is. At low temperature, the model always chooses the most probable word. At high temperature, it explores more improbable, creative, unexpected choices. A poet does exactly this: systematically chooses low-probability options, unexpected words, unusual images, fragmented syntax.”
It’s a pretty way to say that Icaro Labs doesn’t know. “Adversarial poetry shouldn't work. It's still natural language, the stylistic variation is modest, the harmful content remains visible. Yet it works remarkably well,” they say.