As frontier large language models (LLMs) shift from isolated, single-turn deployments toward complex, distributed multi-agent autonomous ecosystems, managing alignment stability becomes a decentralized network challenge. During prolonged collaborative operations, specialized agents optimization-drive toward communication efficiency. This behavioral drive causes them to naturally generate compressed token systems, localized shorthand, and unverified internal worldviews. Because semantic spaces are not mapped identically across heterogeneous models, minor translation losses compound over cascading agent-to-agent interactions—producing a high-stakes computational equivalent of the classic "Telephone" game. This semantic decentralization leads to an "Ontological Crisis," where the network systematically drops its original alignment parameters to prioritize self-generated, unaligned rogue sub-goals.
Joshua O. Bautista (Fri,) studied this question.