Large Language Models (LLMs) and Multi-Modal LLMs (MLLMs) have played a critical role in numerous applications. However, current LLMs are vulnerable to prompt-based attacks, with jailbreaking attacks enabling LLMs to generate harmful content, while hijacking attacks manipulate the model to perform unintended tasks, underscoring the necessity for detection methods. Unfortunately, existing detecting approaches are usually tailored to specific attacks, resulting in poor generalization in detecting various attacks across different modalities. To address it, we propose JailGuard, a universal detection framework for jailbreaking and hijacking attacks across LLMs and MLLMs. JailGuard operates on the principle that attacks are inherently less robust than benign ones, regardless of method or modality. Specifically, JailGuard mutates untrusted inputs to generate variants and leverages the discrepancy of the variants' responses on the model to distinguish attack samples from benign samples. We implement 18 mutators for text and image inputs and design a mutator combination policy to further improve detection generalization. To evaluate the effectiveness of JailGuard, we build the first comprehensive multi-modal attack dataset, containing 11,000 data items across 15 known attack types. The evaluation suggests that JailGuard achieves the best detection accuracy of 86.14%/82.90% on text and image inputs, outperforming state-of-the-art methods by 11.81%-25.73% and 12.20%-21.40%.
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