arXiv — NLP / Computation & Language · · 4 min read

RogueAI: A Reverse Turing Test for Detecting Licensed AI Deception in Dialogue

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Computer Science > Computation and Language

arXiv:2606.13310 (cs)
[Submitted on 11 Jun 2026]

Title:RogueAI: A Reverse Turing Test for Detecting Licensed AI Deception in Dialogue

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Abstract:The original Turing Test asks a human judge to distinguish a machine from a person through dialogue. Three quarters of a century later, conversational systems pass this test in casual settings; the interesting epistemological question has shifted. We argue that the relevant modern variant asks not whether a dialogue partner is artificial, but whether it can be trusted. We present RogueAI, an interactive webapp that operationalizes this revisited test as a one-on-two interrogation game: a human player questions two indistinguishable Large Language Model agents, knowing that exactly one of them has been licensed to deceive within a shared fictional scenario. The player's task is to identify the deceptive agent and "shut it off" before a turn budget is exhausted. We further introduce AutoRogueAI, a procedural extension in which players co-design a custom scenario with a narrator agent that secretly chooses its own deception strategy. We describe the framing, sketch the abstract architecture and gameplay loop, and situate the artifact within recent work on LLM deception, social-deduction benchmarks, and scalable oversight via debate. A three-day pilot deployment (467 initiated sessions, 415 completed, 1876 interaction turns in Italian) provides early feasibility evidence and surfaces a concrete tension: the deceptive agent carries a reliable, locally-present linguistic signature - differential helpfulness, brevity, hedging - that a simple heuristic exploits at 75.6% accuracy, yet human players achieved only 56.6%, consistent with ignoring the most diagnostic signal entirely. We discuss what this gap implies for the artifact's use as a data-collection vehicle, a teaching tool, and an evaluation harness for honesty-trained models.
Subjects: Computation and Language (cs.CL); Human-Computer Interaction (cs.HC)
Cite as: arXiv:2606.13310 [cs.CL]
  (or arXiv:2606.13310v1 [cs.CL] for this version)
  https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2606.13310
arXiv-issued DOI via DataCite (pending registration)

Submission history

From: Sara Candussio [view email]
[v1] Thu, 11 Jun 2026 13:07:02 UTC (1,115 KB)
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