Blueberry comments on Hacking the CEV for Fun and Profit - Less Wrong
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
Comments (194)
Something like the Dr. Evil CEV hack described in the main post. Essentially, we want to block out any way of creating new humans that could be used to override CEV, so it makes sense to start by blocking out all humans created artificially. It might also be a good idea to require the humans to have been born before a certain time, say 2005, so no humans created after 2005 can affect CEV (at least in the first round).
Turkey basters are probably not a threat. However, there's an advantage to being overly conservative here. The very small number of people created or modified through some sort of artificial means for non-CEV-hacking reasons can be added in after subsequent rounds of CEV. But if the first round includes ten trillion hacked humans by mistake, it will be too late to remove them because they'll outvote everyone else.
Requiring that people have been incubated in a human womb seems like enough of a bottleneck, though even that's politically problematic if there are artificial wombs or tech for incubation in non-humans.
However, I'm more concerned that uncaring inhuman forces already have a vote.
You may also be interested in this article:
Can the common brain parasite, Toxoplasma gondii, influence human culture?
You're probably right. It probably is. But we lose nothing by being more conservative, because the first round of CEV will add in all the turkey baster babies.