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LLMs Corrupt Your Documents When You Delegate 2026-05-14 paper https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.15597
Philippe Laban
Tobias Schnabel
Jennifer Neville

LLMs Corrupt Your Documents When You Delegate

  • arXiv ID: 2604.15597
  • Authors: Philippe Laban, Tobias Schnabel, Jennifer Neville (Microsoft Research)
  • Categories: cs.CL (Computation and Language), cs.HC (Human-Computer Interaction)
  • Published: 2026-04-17
  • Repository: microsoft/DELEGATE52
  • Dataset: datasets/microsoft/DELEGATE52

Abstract

Large Language Models (LLMs) are poised to disrupt knowledge work, with the emergence of delegated work as a new interaction paradigm (e.g., vibe coding). Delegation requires trust — the expectation that the LLM will faithfully execute the task without introducing errors into documents. We introduce DELEGATE-52 to study the readiness of AI systems in delegated workflows. DELEGATE-52 simulates long delegated workflows that require in-depth document editing across 52 professional domains, such as coding, crystallography, and music notation. Our large-scale experiment with 19 LLMs reveals that current models degrade documents during delegation: even frontier models (Gemini 3.1 Pro, Claude 4.6 Opus, GPT 5.4) corrupt an average of 25% of document content by the end of long workflows, with other models failing more severely. Additional experiments reveal that agentic tool use does not improve performance on DELEGATE-52, and that degradation severity is exacerbated by document size, length of interaction, or presence of distractor files. Our analysis shows that current LLMs are unreliable delegates: they introduce sparse but severe errors that silently corrupt documents, compounding over long interaction.

Key Metrics

  • 19 LLMs tested across 6 model families
  • 310 work environments across 52 professional domains
  • Frontier models average ~25% degradation after 20 interactions
  • All-model average ~50% degradation after 20 interactions
  • Python is the only domain where most models (17/19) achieve "ready" status
  • Critical failures account for ~80% of total degradation
  • Agentic tool use incurs 2-5x input token overhead