Security Concerns for Large Language Models: A Survey

Published in arxiV, 2025

Recommended citation: Miles Q. Li, and Benjamin CM Fung. Security Concerns for Large Language Models: A Survey. arXiv, arXiv:2505.18889 https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.18889

Large Language Models (LLMs) such as GPT-4 (and its recent iterations like GPT-4o and the GPT-4.1 series), Google’s Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude 3 models, and xAI’s Grok have caused a revolution in natural language processing, but their capabilities also introduce new security vulnerabilities. In this survey, we provide a comprehensive overview of the emerging security concerns around LLMs, categorizing threats into prompt injection and jailbreaking, adversarial attacks (including input perturbations and data poisoning), misuse by malicious actors (e.g., for disinformation, phishing, and malware generation), and worrisome risks inherent in autonomous LLM agents. A significant focus has been recently placed on the latter, exploring goal misalignment, emergent deception, self-preservation instincts, and the potential for LLMs to develop and pursue covert, misaligned objectives (scheming), which may even persist through safety training. We summarize recent academic and industrial studies (2022-2025) that exemplify each threat, analyze proposed defenses and their limitations, and identify open challenges in securing LLM-based applications. We conclude by emphasizing the importance of advancing robust, multi-layered security strategies to ensure LLMs are safe and beneficial.

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Recommended citation: Miles Q. Li, and Benjamin CM Fung. Security Concerns for Large Language Models: A Survey. arXiv, arXiv:2505.18889