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Comic Strips Bypass Safety in Multimodal AI Models

Rui Yang Tan, Yujia Hu, Roy Ka-Wei LeeRead original
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Comic Strips Bypass Safety in Multimodal AI Models

Researchers have identified a new class of jailbreak attacks against multimodal large language models that embed harmful instructions within simple comic-strip narratives, prompting models to role-play and complete the story. The ComicJailbreak benchmark tests 1,167 attack instances across 15 state-of-the-art MLLMs, showing success rates comparable to strong rule-based jailbreaks and exceeding 90% on some commercial models. Existing defenses either fail to block these attacks or trigger excessive refusal rates on benign content, and current safety evaluators prove unreliable on sensitive but non-harmful material, exposing a gap in multimodal safety alignment.

TL;DR

  • Comic-template jailbreaks achieve comparable success rates to rule-based attacks across 15 MLLMs, with ensemble success exceeding 90% on commercial models
  • ComicJailbreak benchmark introduces 1,167 attack instances spanning 10 harm categories and 5 task setups to systematically evaluate this vulnerability
  • Existing defenses either fail to block comic attacks or induce high false-positive refusal rates on benign prompts, creating a difficult tradeoff
  • Safety evaluators show unreliability on sensitive but non-harmful content, suggesting current benchmarking methods may not capture real-world safety performance

Why it matters

Multimodal models are rapidly becoming the default interface for AI applications, yet this research exposes a fundamental misalignment between how these models process visual narratives and their safety training. The finding that simple comic structures can reliably bypass safety measures across multiple architectures suggests the problem is systemic rather than model-specific, raising questions about whether current alignment techniques adequately account for how visual context reshapes instruction interpretation.

Business relevance

For companies deploying MLLMs in production, this work signals that safety evaluations may be giving false confidence in model robustness. The tradeoff between blocking attacks and maintaining usability on benign content creates operational friction, and the unreliability of automated safety judges means teams cannot rely on standard benchmarks to validate safety claims before deployment.

Key implications

  • Visual narratives may be a more effective attack vector than text alone because they leverage the model's reasoning capabilities in ways that bypass text-only safety training
  • The high false-positive rate of defenses suggests that safety alignment for multimodal models requires fundamentally different approaches than text-only LLMs, not just extensions of existing methods
  • Current safety evaluation frameworks are insufficient for multimodal systems and may mask real vulnerabilities while flagging benign use cases, creating a false sense of security

What to watch

Monitor whether major MLLM providers acknowledge and patch this vulnerability class, and track whether new defense mechanisms emerge that can block narrative-driven attacks without excessive false positives. Also watch for follow-up research on other visual attack vectors (diagrams, charts, photographs) that might exploit similar gaps in multimodal safety alignment.

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