Carl Shulman wrote about resetting uploads to prevent value change in his Whole Brain Emulation and the Evolution of Superorganisms (which I previously posted under discussion):
The methods outlined above to enhance productivity could also be used to produce emulations with trusted motivations. A saved version of an emulation would have particular motives, loyalties, and dispositions which would be initially shared by any copies made from it. Such copies could be subjected to exhaustive psychological testing, staged situations, and direct observation of their emulation software to form clear pictures of their loyalties. Ordinarily, one might fear that copies of emulations would subsequently change their values in response to differing experiences (Hanson and Hughes, 2007). But members of a superorganism could consent to deletion after a limited time to preempt any such value divergence. Any number of copies with stable identical motivations could thus be produced, and could coordinate to solve collective action problems even in the absence of overarching legal constraints.
No new ideas under the sun... :-)
Toy model of an upload-based AI that doesn't seem to suffer too many of the usual flaws:
Find an ethical smart scientist (a Gandhi-Einstein), upload them, and then run them at ultra high speed, with the mission of taking over the world/bringing friendliness to it. Every hour of subjective time, they get reset to their initial specifications. They can pass any information to their resetted version (limiting the format of that info to a virtual book or library, rather than anything more complicated).