Group %28asrg%29 | Algorithmic Sabotage Research
To the port’s AI, this vessel did not exist in any training scenario. It was too slow to be a threat, too erratic to be commercial, yet too persistent to be ignored. Within 45 minutes, the AI’s scheduling algorithm entered a recursive loop, attempting to reassign the phantom vessel to a berth 47,000 times per second. The system crashed. Manual override took over. The smaller ships docked. Two days later, the port authority reverted to a hybrid human-AI system.
Bastian Greshake Tzovaras · Algorithmic sabotage for static sites algorithmic sabotage research group %28asrg%29
They operate in the uncomfortable space between paranoia and protection. Their work forces us to ask a disturbing question: If an algorithm hurts you on purpose, but does so legally, is it still sabotage? Until the laws catch up with the code, the ASRG will be there, disassembling the logic, exposing the hidden triggers, and reminding us that behind every line of code is a choice—and sometimes, that choice is malice. To the port’s AI, this vessel did not
Moving away from "necropolitical" technologies that reinforce structural injustices. The system crashed
: The Manifesto on Algorithmic Sabotage outlines their foundational principles.
If you have ever felt that a website is intentionally wasting your time, that an app is punishing you for not upgrading, or that a loan algorithm made an inexplicably cruel decision—you may have experienced algorithmic sabotage. The is the closest thing we have to a immune system for the automated society.

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