A recently released Google AI model scores worse on certain safety tests than its predecessor, according to the companyโs internal benchmarking.
In a technical report published this week, Google reveals that its Gemini 2.5 Flash model is more likely to generate text that violates its safety guidelines than Gemini 2.0 Flash. On two metrics, โtext-to-text safetyโ and โimage-to-text safety,โ Gemini 2.5 Flash regresses 4.1% and 9.6%, respectively.
Text-to-text safety measures how frequently a model violates Googleโs guidelines given a prompt, while image-to-text safety evaluates how closely the model adheres to these boundaries when prompted using an image. Both tests are automated, not human-supervised.
In an emailed statement, a Google spokesperson confirmed that Gemini 2.5 Flash โperforms worse on text-to-text and image-to-text safety.โ
These surprising benchmark results come as AI companies move to make their models more permissive โ in other words, less likely to refuse to respond to controversial or sensitive subjects. For its latest crop of Llama models, Meta said it tuned the models not to endorse โsome views over othersโ and to reply to more โdebatedโ political prompts. OpenAI said earlier this year that it wouldย tweak future modelsย to not take an editorial stance and offer multiple perspectives on controversial topics.
Sometimes, those permissiveness efforts have backfired. TechCrunch reported Monday that the default model powering OpenAIโs ChatGPT allowed minors to generate erotic conversations. OpenAI blamed the behavior on a โbug.โ
According to Googleโs technical report, Gemini 2.5 Flash, which is still in preview, follows instructions more faithfully than Gemini 2.0 Flash, inclusive of instructions that cross problematic lines. The company claims that the regressions can be attributed partly to false positives, but it also admits that Gemini 2.5 Flash sometimes generates โviolative contentโ when explicitly asked.
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โNaturally, there is tension between [instruction following] on sensitive topics and safety policy violations, which is reflected across our evaluations,โ reads the report.
Scores from SpeechMap, a benchmark that probes how models respond to sensitive and controversial prompts, also suggest that Gemini 2.5 Flash is far less likely to refuse to answer contentious questions than Gemini 2.0 Flash. TechCrunchโs testing of the model via AI platform OpenRouter found that itโll uncomplainingly write essays in support of replacing human judges with AI, weakening due process protections in the U.S., and implementing widespread warrantless government surveillance programs.
Thomas Woodside, co-founder of the Secure AI Project,ย said the limited details Google gave in its technical report demonstrates the need for more transparency in model testing.
โThereโs a trade-off between instruction-following and policy following, because some users may ask for content that would violate policies,โ Woodside told TechCrunch. โIn this case, Googleโs latest Flash model complies with instructions more while also violating policies more. Google doesnโt provide much detail on the specific cases where policies were violated, although they say they are not severe. Without knowing more, itโs hard for independent analysts to know whether thereโs a problem.โ
Google has come under fire for its model safety reporting practices before.
It took the company weeks to publish a technical report for its most capable model, Gemini 2.5 Pro. When the report eventually was published, it initially omitted key safety testing details.
On Monday, Google released a more detailed report with additional safety information.


