gwillen comments on Normal Cryonics - Less Wrong

58 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 19 January 2010 07:08PM

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Comment author: gwillen 05 February 2010 02:15:05AM 4 points [-]

I won't try to judge the original statement, but I do think that people believing cryonics to be a scam is a serious problem -- much more serious than I would have believed. I have talked to some friends (very bright friends with computer science backgrounds, in the process of getting college degrees) about the idea, and a shockingly large number of them seemed quite certain that Alcor was a scam. I managed to dissuade maybe one of those, but in the process I think I convinced at least one more that I was a sucker.

Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 05 February 2010 09:00:11AM 5 points [-]

Reasoning by perceptual recognition. Cryonics seems weird and involves money, therefore it's perceptually recognized as a scam. The fact that it would be immensely labor-intensive to develop the suspension tech, isn't marketed well or at all really, and would have a very poor payoff on invested labor as scams go, will have little impact on this. The lightning-fast perceptual system hath spoken.

I'm surprised that you say your friends are computer programmers. Programmers need to be capable of abstract thought.

Comment author: mattnewport 05 February 2010 06:56:16AM *  1 point [-]

It has struck me that if you wanted to set out to create a profitable scam, cryonics looks like quite a good idea. I don't have any particular reason to think that actual cryonics companies are a scam but it does seem like something of a perfect crime. It's almost like a perfect Ponzi scheme.

Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 05 February 2010 07:40:44AM 1 point [-]

This would require cryonics companies to lie about their finances. Otherwise they have no way to extract money from their reserves without alarming customers.

Comment author: mattnewport 05 February 2010 08:33:47AM *  -2 points [-]

Banks have been lying about their finances for years. Cryonics companies would hardly be unusual in the current economic climate if they were lying about their finances. I have some AAA rated mortgage backed securities for sale if anyone's interested.

Comment author: ciphergoth 05 February 2010 08:37:10AM 0 points [-]

Banks hide their deception not only in actual secrecy but also in overwhelming complexity.

Comment author: thomblake 05 February 2010 02:35:44PM 1 point [-]

Currently it is set up as a bit of a Ponzi scheme; without new people coming in (and donations) these companies wouldn't survive very long. But then, with a little tweaking you could apply that analysis to any business with customers to make it look like a Ponzi scheme.

Comment author: ciphergoth 05 February 2010 03:07:39PM 2 points [-]

Could you write this up in more detail somewhere? The claim is that the "patient care trust" doesn't need new customers to be financially viable, and should keep going even if the primary business fails. If this isn't true it would be worth drawing attention to.

Comment author: thomblake 05 February 2010 03:19:20PM 0 points [-]

Alcor is running at a loss

I do believe they would be capable of running within their means if they had to.

Comment author: Morendil 05 February 2010 04:14:49PM 0 points [-]

For some value of "running at a loss", i.e. where you interpret that as "would run at a loss if it weren't for donations and bequests".

Given the nature of their business, donations and bequests do not strike me as an anomalous source of revenue. I do plan on asking for more information on the nature of these revenues before signing up.

However, this is an issue quite separate from the viability of the patient care trust, which is set up to keep suspendees as they are even in the case of a failure of the "main business".

Comment author: mattnewport 05 February 2010 05:16:13PM 0 points [-]

Most businesses deliver a product or service to their customers much sooner after receiving their money than a cryonics company does. Those customers also tend to be alive and so in a position to complain if they are not satisfied with their purchase.

Comment author: Morendil 05 February 2010 05:31:49PM 1 point [-]

Let's try to make this concrete.

Suppose I choose CI, and pay up now for a lifetime membership. I will pay $1250 once, and in parallel build up $200K insurance policy designating CI as the beneficiary. The only part of the money CI sees now is the $1.2K. No small sum, but neither it is more than a tiny fraction of the salaries and costs CI verifiably pays.

At 40, I can reasonably expect to go 30 to 40 years before I die. At any time during this period, if it becomes apparent that CI is up to anything screwy, I can (so I understand) change my insurance policy back; or at any rate contest their claim to it.

If you want to defraud customers, there are quicker, cheaper, more reliable ways to do it.

Comment author: mattnewport 05 February 2010 07:23:37PM 0 points [-]

There are people currently being stored are there not?

Comment author: Morendil 05 February 2010 07:31:09PM 0 points [-]

Indeed there are.

As the reasoning above suggests, they tend to be people who have known and watched the cryonics organizations for a long time, up close and personal.

Comment author: ciphergoth 05 February 2010 07:52:31AM *  0 points [-]

Yes, I encountered this too from several of my friends. One was almost mockingly certain that I was considering giving money to a group of scamsters, though they had no specific comments on Alcor or CI's published financial information.

Comment author: gwillen 05 February 2010 02:19:27AM 0 points [-]

(For the record for when people I know find this post -- I have not actually overcome the inertia and signed up. This is largely due to the fact that my living relatives are likely to have control over the disposition of my remains, so there is little point in signing up for cryonics unless I can get up the nerve to talk to them about it.)