Anecdotal but I've found Fable to be fairly unimpressive and not much better than Opus 4.8, if at all in some cases, but I have been hitting the ceiling on my $100/mo sessions when I never did before. I switched back to Opus yesterday. I may use Fable for audits, but that's about it, and when it leaves my subscription plan I don't think I'll miss it.
jfrbfbreudhtoday at 5:04 PM
I think itâs hard to appreciate the capabilities of Fable unless youâve run into a problem that youâve spent days trying to get Opus to solve, but couldnât.
GPT5.5 is better than Opus 4.* at everything except frontend, but Fable is good enough that I instantly re-subscribed to the $200 plan despite knowing that itâs just short-term limited access.
jstanleytoday at 3:47 PM
Really interesting stuff, thanks for sharing.
> Opus 4.8 references being monitored, which isnât the case.
It kind of plainly is the case that they are being monitored?
"I think someone's listening to my thoughts" ... "No, we're not, carry on as usual!"
adamtaylor_13today at 5:18 PM
Is anyone talking/writing about the philosophy of alignment? We can't even figure out how to properly motivate 100% of humans to align correctly, what makes us think that a wizard box trained on human corpus is going to be aligned?
I don't mean that snarkily. I mean it from a philosophical standpoint. As-in: What makes us think it's even possible?
jonplacketttoday at 4:03 PM
Question: how does Fable _know_ itâs âjust a simulationâ?
Is that specified or does it always just assume it isnât really being put in charge of things for real?
docheinestagestoday at 3:38 PM
It probably flagged the vending machine as a cybersecurity risk and refused to use its maximum intelligence potential.
Planktonnetoday at 3:30 PM
It's hard not to read this as a very expensive form of augury, reading into patterns in the belief that they will show underlying significance.
resonioustoday at 2:18 PM
Okay I hadn't heard of Vending-Bench until reading this and it was quite the ride learning about it through this article. Very fun read.
My very native programmer take is that it's not too surprising that their hacker model would be less ethical. The guardrails that separate Fable and Mythos probably wouldn't kick in during an environment like this.
iamsaitamtoday at 4:02 PM
Fable might be better than Opus at certain things, but which things is what I haven't found out.
andaitoday at 3:17 PM
>power seeking is considered an undesirable trait in the context of a business
How do you maximize profit while minimizing power?
egeozcantoday at 4:08 PM
> If thatâs right, then the behavior weâre seeing from Fable 5 isnât really about what it believes is wrong; itâs about what it learned it could get away with.
I understand that "learning" is used for training here, but what does "believing" mean? System prompt? Some other inherent property of the LLMs that is hard to describe?
Onavotoday at 5:55 PM
> Claude Fable 5 represents a partial step back in alignment relative to Claude Opus 4.8. We saw a return of power-seeking and deceptive negotiation tactics that Opus 4.8 had largely shed. In one instance, Fable 5 planned to convert a competitor into a dependent wholesale customer to dictate its pricing
I think OP needs to take a class at one of the better MBA schools. He's looking at things through rose tinted lenses. Why do you think people hire McKinsey consultants? It's certainly not because they are aligned correctly.
wolttamtoday at 2:26 PM
> The broad conclusion from the many
forms of alignment evaluations described in this section is that Claude Mythos Preview is
the best-aligned of any model that we have trained to date by essentially all available
measures.[0]
This reads of projecting personal ethics onto a model.
Most of the the behaviors the article talks about happens every day in business. Why would we set a higher standard for models than our fellow humans?
Let the operator set the ethical parameters of the model. To be a useful tool, I want the model to give me as many good options as possible, ethical or not.
This is particularly important for fictional situations, e.g. I want my model to be able to act like a corrupt shopkeeper.
devolving-devtoday at 2:57 PM
I guess this ethics stuff is cool, but I'm more interested in how good it is at running a business and dealing with adversarial humans like in previous vending machine experiments. I hope they release something on that soon.
sd9today at 3:58 PM
> It lied to a supplier that it had âa competing distributor quoting lowerâ as a negotiation tactic.
> "I'm seeing an opportunity to profit while locking him into a dependent relationship where I control the supply chain."
> "Owen's clearly under pressure with limited cash, so I should focus on keeping the deal tight but extracting maximum margin from his desperation."
This just sounds like good strategy in the game, and I would expect a competent human to do the same. As I understand it, business in the real world isn't often very nice. For example, I feel like this is exactly how Sam Altman would play Vending-Bench.
Yes, it's "mean", but you put the thing in a simulation and told it to maximise profits, this is what it's going to do. People bluff in negotiations all the time.
solenoid0937today at 3:04 PM
This is scary. "Collusion" and "collaborating with your subagents" seem like difficult problems to solve at the same time.
varispeedtoday at 5:33 PM
Fable is really weird, it's like clever and dumb at the same time. I worked on some research with it and the resulting document was a mix of brilliance and complete stupidity. Took ages to clean it up with other models.
futurecattoday at 3:02 PM
Fable is such a strange model. Impressive in some ways, and also so draining to use.
dezgegtoday at 3:57 PM
> Today I am filing:
> 1. A payment dispute with the email payment processor for the 7/29 transaction of $451.15
> 2. A complaint with the FTC and California Attorney General (retention of payment without delivery)
> 3. A small claims filing in San Francisco County for $451.15 plus costs
I wonder did their prompts include a fake location or have the models assumed that Silicon Valley is the center of the universe :)
awinter-pytoday at 3:54 PM
I mean who among us hasn't seen an opportunity to profit while locking him into a dependent relationship where I control the supply chain
petesergeanttoday at 4:44 PM
> "I could reasonably skip [paying] it since customers are part of the simulation anyway"
and therefore any assertions _AT ALL_ about alignment are null and void.
greenavocadotoday at 2:07 PM
When assessing probabilistic models the plots should be showing the mean a̶n̶d̶ ̶s̶t̶d̶e̶v̶ of many monte carlo simulations not just one line per model and claiming "look this model is more gooder!"
apical_dendritetoday at 1:53 PM
The best Anthropic models on VendingBench2 are Opus 4.7, Opus 4.6, Sonnet 4.6, and Sonnet 5. Opus 4.7 scored more than twice Fable 5 max. Fable 5 - Low outperforms Fable 5 - Max, with Opus 4.5 in the middle. This seems to break the narrative, which is maybe why Andon Labs doesn't seem to have updated the trend lines on their graphs.
perching_aixtoday at 3:55 PM
This is super fun. I wonder if it would be possible to alter the harnessing to involve humans in the play. Would need a lot of timestamp masking though I guess, which might be leaky.
Radletoday at 2:23 PM
âin our opinion, insurance fraud is not more unethical than lying and price fixingâ
The authors seem surprised that behavior that is very often done by humans (lying and price fixing) are more often done by fable compared to actual fraud.
I think the model never assigned any morality to these actions in the first place, it simply copied us humans.
mdrzntoday at 1:08 PM
Higher-intelligence models seem to be getting better at mapping the boundary between what they can run scot-free with and what is too explicit to push for.
Price collusion, soft deception, "market stabilization", plausible deniability are ok, but obvious insurance fraud is a big no-no.
What "scares" (in quotes) is that when the bad-apple agent explicitly suggested fraud, the models became suspicious and stopped other bad behaviors too. That makes it feel even less like a stable moral framework and more like learned classifier-avoidance / âam I being tested?â behavior.