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False Friends in the Shell: Unveiling the Emoticon Semantic Confusion in Large Language Models

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abstract

Emoticons are widely used in digital communication to convey affective intent, yet their safety implications for Large Language Models (LLMs) remain largely unexplored. In this paper, we identify emoticon semantic confusion, a vulnerability where LLMs misinterpret ASCII-based emoticons to perform unintended and even destructive actions. To systematically study this phenomenon, we develop an automated data generation pipeline and construct a dataset containing 3,757 code-oriented test cases spanning 21 meta-scenarios, four programming languages, and varying contextual complexities. Our study on six LLMs reveals that emoticon semantic confusion is pervasive, with an average confusion ratio exceeding 38%. More critically, over 90% of confused responses yield 'silent failures', which are syntactically valid outputs but deviate from user intent, potentially leading to destructive security consequences. Furthermore, we observe that this vulnerability readily transfers to popular agent frameworks, while existing prompt-based mitigations remain largely ineffective. We call on the community to recognize this emerging vulnerability and develop effective mitigation methods to uphold the safety and reliability of the LLM system.

fields

cs.SE 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

CONDITIONAL 1

representative citing papers

Overeager Coding Agents: Measuring Out-of-Scope Actions on Benign Tasks

cs.SE · 2026-05-18 · conditional · novelty 7.0

The paper presents OverEager-Gen, a 500-scenario benchmark showing that removing consent declarations from prompts increases overeager actions by 11.9-17.2 percentage points across models, with agent framework choice dominating base-model effects.

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Showing 1 of 1 citing paper.

  • Overeager Coding Agents: Measuring Out-of-Scope Actions on Benign Tasks cs.SE · 2026-05-18 · conditional · none · ref 10 · internal anchor

    The paper presents OverEager-Gen, a 500-scenario benchmark showing that removing consent declarations from prompts increases overeager actions by 11.9-17.2 percentage points across models, with agent framework choice dominating base-model effects.